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A Large Blue And White 'floral Scroll' Dish — YONGLE PERIOD (1403-1424)

A Large Blue And White 'floral Scroll' Dish

YONGLE PERIOD (1403-1424)

This large blue and white porcelain dish from the Yongle period represents the pinnacle of Ming Dynasty ceramic craftsmanship, featuring intricately painted floral scrollwork in cobalt blue against a pure white ground. The refined decoration and exceptional quality of the glaze demonstrate the technical mastery achieved at the imperial kilns in Jingdezhen during this culturally flourishing era. Yongle period porcelain, particularly blue and white wares, became highly prized both within China and among international collectors and patrons.

Notes

LOT ESSAY Large, luxurious dishes of this type were highly prized in India and the Middle East, as evidenced by the numerous examples published in collections in Istanbul and Tehran, as well as by the many earthenware copies produced after them. For examples of the various designs found on these dishes, see R. Krahl, Chinese Ceramics in the Topkapi Saray Museum, Istanbul, vol. 2, London, 1985, pp. 512–514, nos. 599–607, and J. A. Pope, Chinese Porcelains from the Ardebil Shrine, Washington, 1956, pl. 34, no. 29:88, for a dish of comparable size and design to the present example. Yongle blue and white dishes of this type, however, were also traditionally prized by Chinese collectors. A dish of this design was excavated at Dongmentou, Zhushan, in 1994 and included in the Chang Foundation exhibition Imperial Hongwu and Yongle Porcelain Excavated at Jingdezhen, Taipei, 1996, p. 153, no. 44. Other similar dishes include one in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, published in the Illustrated Catalogue of Ming Dynasty Porcelain, pl. 37; one exhibited at the Hong Kong Museum of Art, Ming and Ch’ing Porcelain from the Collection of the T.Y. Chao Family Foundation, 1978, no. 5; one illustrated by J. Ayers in The Baur Collection, Geneva, 1969, vol. II, no. A140; and another included in An Exhibition of Blue-Decorated Porcelain of the Ming Dynasty, Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1949, p. 36, no. 38 (lent by C. T. Loo). Comparable Yongle dishes sold at auction include one from the Henry M. Knight Collection sold at Bonhams Hong Kong, 4 June 2019, lot 27; one sold at Sotheby’s Hong Kong, 4 April 2012, lot 2152; and another sold at Christie’s New York, 25 March 2022, lot 1044.

🔨 Auction Lot

Important Chinese Art

March 26, 2026

Estimate: $200,000$300,000

Sold: $279,400

Lot 649

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About this work

A Large Blue And White 'floral Scroll' Dish, YONGLE PERIOD (1403-1424)

This large blue and white porcelain dish from the Yongle period represents the pinnacle of Ming Dynasty ceramic craftsmanship, featuring intricately painted floral scrollwork in cobalt blue against a pure white ground. The refined decoration and exceptional quality of the glaze demonstrate the technical mastery achieved at the imperial kilns in Jingdezhen during this culturally flourishing era. Yongle period porcelain, particularly blue and white wares, became highly prized both within China and among international collectors and patrons.

Seen at
Christie's, London, United Kingdom

Related themes

Ornamental dish, Porcelain, Serene, East Asian Aesthetics, Decorative Arts, Ming Dynasty, Blue and white ceramics, Chinese, 15th Century, Floral Design