TWO ALTERED JADE TAOTIE MASK NECKLACE CLOSING DEVICES
TWO ALTERED JADE TAOTIE MASK NECKLACE CLOSING DEVICES

LATE SHANG/EARLY WESTERN ZHOU DYNASTY, CIRCA 1200-1100 BC

Details
TWO ALTERED JADE TAOTIE MASK NECKLACE CLOSING DEVICES
LATE SHANG/EARLY WESTERN ZHOU DYNASTY, CIRCA 1200-1100 BC
The smaller carved in low relief with a broad horizontal snout, striated brows above the eyes and a groove above the conical hole and between the horns, the back flat, the grey-green stone now opaque and of buff color; the larger flat mask carved in semi-thread relief with slanted eyes flanking the large nose, small ears and a pair of upright bottle horns flanking a chevron-carved crest above the conical hole; together with an altered grey-green jade coiled dragon pendant, Shang dynasty, with a slit between the jaws and the tail leading to the central conical aperture, the open mouth with serrated edge and the curved spine with notched flanges, with double grooves delineating the eyes, ear and scrolls on the body
1¼ and 1¾ in. (3.2, 4.4 cm.) high, 2 in. (5.1 cm.) diam. (3)
Provenance
Smaller taotie: G.L. Winthrop Collection, New York.
C.T. Loo & Co., Paris.
Frank Caro, New York, 1964.
Larger taotie: J.T. Tai & Co., New York, prior to 1966.
Dragon pendant: acquired prior to 1966.
Literature
Smaller taotie mask: A. Salmony, Carved Jade of Ancient China, Berkeley, 1938, pl. XLVII (4).
Exhibited
Smaller taotie mask: An Exhibition of Chinese Archaic Jades, C.T. Loo & Co. at Norton Gallery of Art, West Palm Beach, Florida, February 1950, pl. LVI, no. 3.

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Lot Essay

Compare the smaller of the two taotie mask-form necklace closing devices to one of similar shape and with similar rolled snout excavated from a Western Zhou tomb at Shangguo, Wenxi, Shanxi province, illustrated in The Complete Collection of Jades Unearthed in China - 3 - Shanxi, Beijing, 2005, p. 143. The larger may be compared to one included in the exhibition, Archaic Chinese Jades, University Museum, Philadelphia, 1940, pl. XII, no. 231.

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