Located in West Palm Beach, FL
Chinese Export Famille Rose Scholars Porcelain Plaque, Republic Period, circa 1920–1940
A finely painted Chinese famille rose porcelain plaque depicting a gathering of scholars and longevity sages, executed in delicate overglaze enamels on a pale celadon-toned porcelain ground. The rectangular plaque measures approximately 10 inches high by 15 inches wide and is presented unframed, allowing the refined porcelain surface and detailed figural decoration to be fully appreciated.
The composition shows a dignified elder figure surrounded by fellow scholars and attendants, rendered in graceful robes decorated with traditional auspicious motifs. One figure presents a peach of immortality, a powerful symbol in Chinese culture representing longevity and divine blessing. Another holds a scroll bearing characters, representing scholarship, wisdom, and the Confucian pursuit of learning. Nearby appear ceremonial objects, including a ruyi scepter and staff, long associated with authority, prosperity, and good fortune.
The figures are dressed in layered court robes typical of late imperial and early Republican scholarly fashion, with long flowing sleeves, patterned borders, and elaborate headdresses that reflect the status of scholar-officials within traditional Chinese society. Their calm expressions and dignified posture evoke the ideals of harmony, knowledge, and cultivated life celebrated in the Chinese literati tradition.
The plaque is painted in the soft pastel palette characteristic of famille rose enameling, including rose pink, celadon green, apricot, turquoise, and soft lavender tones outlined with fine iron-red and black detailing. The careful brushwork and balanced composition are consistent with porcelain plaques produced in Jingdezhen workshops during the Chinese Republic Period (1912–1949), when hand-painted plaques became popular decorative artworks for domestic interiors.
Porcelain plaques of this type were often mounted in hardwood frames or incorporated into screens and wall panels in scholars' studios and refined homes. Today they remain prized both as works of traditional Chinese porcelain painting...
Category
20th Century Qing Enameled Furniture