Tables
A 17th Century red lacquer table with incised bird and flower motifs
Depth: 56.7 cm
Length: 83.2 cm
Provenance
Private Collection: Milan, ItalyExhibitions
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Lacquerware of East Asia, Timeline of Art History.
British Museum collection entry, qiang jin.
Victoria and Albert Museum, China Teachers’ Resource.
Literature
British Museum, London, table or stand, Qing dynasty, 18th century, decorated in qiangjin and tianqi techniques on a brown lacquer ground.
British Museum, London, altar vase (zun), Wanli period, with red lacquer, polychrome filled-in decoration, and engraved-gold ornament on porcelain.
British Museum, London, foliated box and cover, Ming dynasty, 15th century, decorated in the qiangjin technique with phoenixes and lotus scrolls.
A 17th Century red lacquer table with incised bird and flower motifs
Chinese; 17th Century
A refined red lacquer table of elegant proportion, the rectangular top richly ornamented with polychrome decoration and delicate qiangjin incised lines, depicting birds poised among flowering branches. The composition unfolds across the surface with rhythmic balance, blossoms and foliage animated by finely cut outlines. The shaped apron and cabriole legs are similarly enriched with floral ornament, creating a pleasing continuity between structure and surface.
Tables of this type belong to a sophisticated tradition of Chinese lacquer furniture in which graceful form is animated by richly worked surface decoration rather than dense carving. The present example is especially appealing for the way its painterly ornament is united with a light and elegant silhouette. The warm red ground provides an ideal field for the intricate bird and flower designs, whose finely incised outlines lend precision, movement, and delicacy to the overall composition.
The decoration is executed in a manner associated with qiangjin, a technique in which the lacquer surface is incised and enriched with gilded detail. Here, that method is combined with polychrome painting to create a richly layered effect, both linear and painterly in character. The birds and flowering branches belong to one of the most enduring ornamental vocabularies in Chinese art, conveying refinement, natural beauty, and auspicious resonance. On furniture of this kind, such motifs are not merely decorative but integral to the object’s overall rhythm and elegance.
What distinguishes this table is the harmony between surface and structure. The restrained proportions, gently curving legs, and shaped apron give the piece a notable sense of lightness, while the decoration extends fluently across the top, frieze, and legs without ever overwhelming the form. The result is a table of unusual charm and sophistication, combining decorative richness with control and restraint.
This manner of lacquer decoration belongs to the broader late Ming and early Qing tradition in which engraved, painted, and gilded surfaces were used to striking effect on works of furniture as well as on boxes and vessels. Within that tradition, the present table stands out for the elegance of its drawing, the warmth of its red lacquer ground, and the unusually successful marriage of painterly ornament with refined furniture form.