A CELADON JADE BIRD-SHAPED FINIAL
A CELADON JADE BIRD-SHAPED FINIAL
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A RARE CELADON JADE BIRD-SHAPED FINIAL

WESTERN ZHOU DYNASTY (c. 1100-771 BC)

Details
A RARE CELADON JADE BIRD-SHAPED FINIAL
WESTERN ZHOU DYNASTY (c. 1100-771 BC)
The jade is finely carved in the round as a bird standing on its two feet and tail, depicted with round eyes, a slightly hooked beak and a crested crown. It is further decorated with upward turning feathers to its body.
1 13/16 in. (4.7 cm.) high, box
Provenance
Acquired from Chang Wei-Hwa & Company, Taipei, prior to 2000

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Priscilla Kong
Priscilla Kong

Lot Essay

The present bird finial is closely related to an earlier Shang-dynasty flattened bird finial in the British Museum, illustrated by Jessica Rawson in Chinese Jades from the Neolithic to the Qing, London, 1995, pl. 11:3, pp. 203-204. Both the British Museum example and the present finial share a similar profile and the unusual design of upturned plumes on the backs of the birds. However, the British Museum example is much flatter and detailed with fine ridging, whereas the present finial has a fuller three-dimensional presence with details incised with double grooves that are characteristic of the Western Zhou period.

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