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1008(1700309)
A pair of spotted bamboo arm-chairs, Qing dynasty, 19th century.
Estimate
15 000 - 20 000 SEK

Each is constructed with a U-shaped bamboo crestrail continuing to form the arms and the front posts, supported by four slender bamboo sideposts. The lacquered wooden seat above an apron of four bamboo leg-encircling stretchers, supported on legs joined at the base with two leg-encircling stretchers with a softwood footrest. Height back 93 cm. Height seat 52 cm. Width 54 cm. Depth 42 cm.

Wear.

Provenance

Purchased at Bukowskis Spring Sale 574, lot 1419, 28 May 2013. Then with the provenance Kaptensgården, Landskrona, Sweden.

Exhibitions

Compare also with Sotheby's New York, In the Studio: Asian Art, featuring Works from the Collection of Bruce Dayton and Ruth Stricker Dayton, lot 752, 28 September 2021.

Literature

For an interesting discussion on bamboo and hardwood furniture, refer to R. W. Longsdorf, 'Chinese Bamboo Furniture, Its Influence on Hardwood Furniture Design', Orientations, January 1994, pp. 76-83, where the author discusses the features of bamboo furniture carried over to hardwood forms, such as rounded members, wrap-around stretchers, stacked stretchers and the use of closely-placed vertical struts.

More information

In China, bamboo has traditionally held a place of significance within literati culture. Together with the flowering plum and pine, they form the ‘Three Friends of Winter’ for their ability to withstand the cold and remain green. Upright and sturdy, yet easily bending with the wind, bamboo came to signify moral integrity among the literati elite, and has served as a constant source of inspiration for poets and painters, alike.

When compared to their hardwood counterparts in huanghuali and zitan, relatively few examples of bamboo furniture have survived. The material is less durable than hardwoods, and abundant enough that replacements could be easily made. To make a piece of furniture in bamboo, lengths of bamboo were steamed and softened until pliable and bent around a frame. This construction technique inspired examples in huanghuali seen in wraparound stretchers, round legs, circular struts, members carved to imitate nodes of bamboo, and continuous arms.

For condition report contact specialist
Cecilia Nordström
Stockholm
Cecilia Nordström
Senior Specialist Asian Ceramics and Works of Art, European Ceramics and Glass
+46 (0)739 40 08 02
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