The Columbus Dispatch

15th-century bowl found at yard sale sells for $722,000

- Dave Collins

HARTFORD, Conn. – An exceptiona­lly rare 15th-century porcelain bowl made in China that somehow turned up at a Connecticu­t yard sale and sold for just $35 was auctioned off Wednesday for nearly $722,000.

The small white bowl adorned with cobalt blue paintings of flowers and other designs – one of only seven such bowls known to exist in the world – was among a variety of Chinese works of art sold by Sotheby’s as part of its Asia Week events. The names of the seller and buyer were not disclosed.

Sotheby’s had estimated the artifact’s value at $300,000 to $500,000. Wednesday’s auction included 15 bids, starting at $200,000 from someone online and ending at $580,000 from another person bidding by phone. The official purchase price, which included various fees, was $721,800.

An antiques enthusiast came across the Ming Dynasty-era piece and thought it could be something special when browsing a yard sale in the New Haven area last year, according to Sotheby’s. The buyer later emailed informatio­n and photos to Sotheby’s asking for an evaluation.

“It was immediatel­y apparent ... that we were looking at something really very, very special,” Angela Mcateer,

Sotheby’s senior vice president and head of its Chinese Works of Art Department, said earlier this month. “The style of painting, the shape of the bowl, even just the color of the blue is quite characteri­stic of that early, early 15th-century period of porcelain.”

Sotheby’s confirmed it was from the 1400s when they were able to look at it in person – there are no scientific tests, only the trained eyes and hands of specialist­s. The bowl was very smooth to the touch, its glaze was silky and the color and designs are distinctiv­e of the period.

The bowl dates back to the early 1400s during the reign of the Yongle Emperor, the third ruler of the Ming Dynasty,

and was made for the Yongle court. The Yongle court was known to have ushered in a new style to the porcelain kilns in the city of Jingdezhen, and the bowl is a quintessen­tial Yongle product, according to Sotheby’s.

The bowl was made in the shape of a lotus bud or chicken heart. Inside, it is decorated with a medallion at the bottom and a quatrefoil motif surrounded by flowers. The outside includes four blossoms of lotus, peony, chrysanthe­mum and pomegranat­e flower. There are also intricate patterns at the top of both the outside and inside.

Mcateer said only six other such bowls are known to exist, and most of them are in museums.

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