Chinese Soapstone Brush Washer with flowering lotus, early C20th
£95.00
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Chinese Soapstone Brush Washer with flowering lotus, early C20th
COMING SOON!A Chinese soapstone brush washer unusually modelled as a rounded triangular shallow basin in the form of a lotus leaf, footed and with a sprig of flowering lotus growing upwards from it with a vase behind in the form of lotus leaves. The skill of the carver is self evident and the design has been very carefully conceived, artistically employing the varied detail of the natural stone from which the piece was made. Soapstone was first used by the Chinese over three thousand years ago but began its popularity in the Ming dynasty (1368 -1644) with the height of production during the ensuing Qing dynasty (1644 – 1911) when a stone mined in the Shoushan village in northern Fujian was most commonly used. Shoushan soapstone is noted for its smooth texture, bright colours and fine grain and a wide variety of objects were carved from it. This piece is an excellent example of the genre and has survived in pristine condition to become a scholar’s object from the past which can be enjoyed and appreciated today. Production of soapstone carvings continued into the twentieth century and this is probably what we have here but almost certainly from the early years of the period.
Size: | 18 cm (width) x 10 cm (depth) x 7 cm (ht : max) |
Weight: | 375 gm |
Date: | Early C20th |
Condition: | Excellent condition with no chipping to the extremities |
Price: | £95 |