Anon. Orange Pomegranate Flower & White Camellia

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An original 19th-century chinese painting on pith Orange Pomegranate Flower & White Camellia.

An impressive and beautiful large-scale 19th-century Chinese painting on pith. The colours are wonderfully vibrant and the details on the flowers and leaves are exquisitely painted.

The camellia flower has been cultivated in China from at least the 5th century CE and therefore has a deep cultural symbolism. The white camellia denotes innocent love and devotion.

The painting in remarkable overall condition given the fragile nature of the pith substrate. The pith is in good condition within the image area; there is a hairline crack in the pith above the image and some damage to the corners where it is adhered to its original backing paper.

This painting is one of a trio that we have for sale. The painting appears to have been mounted and numbered as part of a series, presumably collected at the time by a western merchant or official in China.

+ Read the S&W Collection Research

Chinese Pith Paintings

Delicate pith paintings by local Chinese artists were collected by Western travellers and merchants from around 1825 onwards. By 1833 the monopoly of trade by the English East India Company had come to an end, opening the China trade to dozens of British companies and seeing the number of merchants and volume of trade flourish. Paintings on pith were produced in port cities to meet the Western demand for local Chinese souvenirs. Relatively inexpensive and conveniently portable, they were often glued into albums to provide protection on the long voyage home.

Typically the paintings would depict attractive local subjects such as cultivated flora, indigenous birds and insects, and local trades, customs and costumes. The painting style would combine a traditional Chinese approach of flattened sweeps of colour with aspects of Western influence in detail and realism.

Pith paper behaves very differently from conventional rag or woodpulp paper. Rather than being plant fibres matted together into a layer, pith is composed of plant cells sliced directly from the inner tissue of the Tetrapanex papyrifera plant, native to Southern China and Taiwan. This unique composition makes it extremely vulnerable to damage by moisture and other environmental factors, becoming very brittle over time and subject to distinctive cracking. It is rare, therefore, that such paintings survive in pristine condition. Being routinely tipped onto album pages, they also often bear glue marks and related discolouration.

Pith also behaves unlike conventional paper as a painting support. Watercolour and gouache paint readily absorb into the plant cells of the pith to create a rich, velvety depth of colour, and then paint pools in relief on the surface, producing exquisitely vibrant raised details, of sparkling, jewel-like intensity.

Pith paintings are a fascinating record of the history, activities and socio-cultural exchanges taking place between China and the West in the 19th century. The juxtaposition of robust vibrancy of paint and translucent fragility of support is an enchanting combination prized by collectors around the world.

+ Artwork Details

Dimensions: Height: 15.4cm (6.06") Width: 24.8cm (9.76")

Presented: Unframed.

Medium: Chinese Painting on Pith

Age: 19th-century

Signed: No.

Inscribed: Numbered lower right: '24'.

Dated: --

Condition: Overall in very good condition for its age. Some minor age toning, mainly towards the periphery, and the odd slight scratch or minor mark. There is a crack in the pith above the image across the upper right corner, and further cracking across the lower right corner of the pith, where it has been adhered to the backing paper. Please see photos for detail.

Stock number: JZ-514