A PANEL OF 'GOAT RIDER' BROCADE
A PANEL OF 'GOAT RIDER' BROCADE

MING DYNASTY, 17TH CENTURY

Details
A PANEL OF 'GOAT RIDER' BROCADE
MING DYNASTY, 17TH CENTURY
depicting six goat riders, with boughs of prunus flowers hung with bird cages on a yellow ground, with Bhuddist emblems interspersed
18.25 x 26 ins (46.5 x 66cms)
mounted on a stretcher

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Lot Essay

The 'Goat Rider' group of silks celebrate the approach of Spring, the prunus blossoms marking the death of Winter. The goat or sheep is the eighth symbolic animal of the Twelve Terrestial Branches, and the emblem of a retired life. The imagery is based on a Song or Yuan dynasty design, as exemplified in the Song embroidered scroll, Nine Rams Chasing Away the Cold, in the National Palace Museum, Taiwan, and in a similar Yuan scroll in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

This same design on a red ground was formerly in the Maeda Family Collection cf Kenre, 'Famed-Fabrics from China, India and Southeast Asia', Shiko-sha, Kyoto, 1979, vol. 1, p. 59, pl. 29. 'Textile Designs of Japan Vol. III, Okinawan, Ainu & Foreign Designs', Tokyo, 1980, fig. 160, 2).

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