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Note: the original German collector
this product inside and outside wall brick that full yellow glaze, enamel is exquisite, color and lively. Dark carved two lines of the dragon, the outer wall plate heart carved beads fire burning, two dragon flying up and down, dragon has been fierce, imposing manner. Inside the ring foot also full yellow glaze, bottom left “da Ming jiajing year” six regular script. as he puts GengBaoChang jiajing toward the yellow self-identify dragon tray is extremely rare, and products only a lot of zhengde years, Beijing’s Palace Museum, national museum of China, Shanghai museum and the British museum and other public and private institutions at home and abroad are all in collection and light, yet most dish without lines. Collectors, only one case of the British museum (also score has double dragon grain, and this product is similar. Jiajing years production of decorative color yellow self-identify YunLongWen products, refer to one of China’s national museum of yellow color self-identify YunLongWen bucket cup. Other refer to a Swiss meiyintang collection jiajing yellow glaze green dragon grain bowl (see the meiyintang China ceramics volume 2, page 80, chart, 696). And jiajing year ZhiHuang self-identify color plate as an example reference of jingdezhen ceramics museum collection is yellow self-identify colors mixed treasure tray. jiajing years ZhiHuang self-identify dragon tray is extremely rare, and this product is well preserved, carved dragon lifelike, vivid, imposing manner, and this product is small and exquisite, hand KeYing grip, is a rare masterpiece of jiajing imperial kiln porcelain. refer to: 1. Jessica harrison-hall: the British museum China ceramic top volume in Ming dynasty, the imperial palace press, 2014, pp. 248, figure 8-31. 2. The national museum of China, the Chinese country museum relics research series China volume In the Ming dynasty “, Shanghai ancient books publishing house in 2007, page 162, 87 chart. 3. Regina krahl: the meiyintang China ceramics volume 2, Azimuth Editions, page 80, 696 chart. 4. Source of iron, “jiang porcelain corpora in Tibet Under the Ming dynasty () “, zarva press, 2007, p. 182. |