top of page
0815-04 C33 copy.jpg

BAMBOO WRIST REST

QING DYNASTY, EARLY 19TH CENTURY

22 cm long

A bamboo wrist rest of typically curved form, delicately engraved with Li Bai, depicted holding his cup in an outstretched left hand as if bringing out a toast to the moon. To the upper left there is a signature Xue hai followed a seal Zhao. The reverse is carefully finished with each edge cut with a concave moulding and with a foot to each corner. The surface bears a rich patina and has a warm amber tone.

 

The natural shape of the bamboo stem well offers itself as suitable wrist rest, and, for this reason, bamboo was among the preferred materials for this type of scholar’s object. This wrist rest depicts Li Bai, a famous poet who lived during the Tang dynasty, an ideal subject for the calligrapher’s desk. The name of the carver, Zhao Xuehai, seems to have been associated especially to landscape and figural engravings. For a further discussion on this subject, see Laurence C. S. Tam, Chinese Bamboo Carving, part. II, Hong Kong Museum of Art, 1982, no. 22, p. 44. 

Provenance:

Nicholas Grindley, London, 2005

 

Formerly in the collection of Ian and Susan Wilson, San Francisco

bottom of page