A RARE GOLD FIGURE OF A QILIN
THE PROPERTY OF A LADY
A RARE GOLD FIGURE OF A QILIN

YUAN DYNASTY (1279-1368)

Details
A RARE GOLD FIGURE OF A QILIN
YUAN DYNASTY (1279-1368)
The double horned qilin is hammered standing four-square with a hollowed body. Its head is chased with bulging eyes, furry eyebrows and open jaws revealing its set of fangs and tongue. The body is defined with scales, serrated mane and upright bushy tail.
2. 7/8 in. (7.3 cm.) high, box
Provenance
An English private collection, acquired in Hong Kong in the 1980s

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Priscilla Kong
Priscilla Kong

Lot Essay

There are numerous references in traditional Chinese mythology and symbolism to the qilin, an auspicious animal with a lion’s head, tiger’s eyes, deer’s body, dragon’s scales, horse’s hooves and the tail of an ox, symbolising longevity, fertility and flourishing age during the reign of a benevolent ruler. In the Yuan dynasty, particularly in the mid-fourteenth century, the image of the qilin became one of the most popular motifs depicted on porcelains, and is usually rendered with a galloping pose with the head facing forward in the centre of a dish.

Compare with two Yuan blue and white dishes with the motif of a galloping qilin. One is published in T. Misugi, Chinese Porcelain Collections in the Near East-Topkapi and Ardebil and Tokapi, Hong Kong, 1981, vol. II, p. 90, and the other is illustrated in Hajni Elias and Giuseppe Eskenazi, A Dealers Hand: The Chinese Art World through the Eyes of Giuseppe Eskenazi, London, 2012, p. 295, pl. 300.

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