A RARE LARGE POTTERY TILE OF A TIGER
PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION
A RARE LARGE POTTERY TILE OF A TIGER

HAN DYNASTY (220 BC-AD 220)

Details
A RARE LARGE POTTERY TILE OF A TIGER
HAN DYNASTY (220 BC-AD 220)
The tile is modeled in relief with a tiger with pronounced stripes emerging from the right side and stretching its forelegs.
19 1⁄4 in. (48.6 cm.) wide, softwood frame
Provenance
C.T. Loo (according to label).
Christian Humann (d. 1981), Pan Asian Collection, New York.
Exhibited
On loan: Denver Art Museum, prior to 1983.

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Rufus Chen (陳嘉安)
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Lot Essay


A very similar striding tiger can be seen decorating a pottery title illustrated in, “A Brief Report on the Cleanup of Hollow Brick Han Tombs in Xianyang City,” Kaogu 1982:3, pl. 1:1.M34. See, also, the Eastern Han pottery architectural element molded with more stylized depictions of tigers, which are shown flanking a bi disc, illustrated by Olov Jansé in Briques et Objets Céramiques Funéraires de l'Epoque des Han, C.T. Loo & Cie, Paris, 1936, pl. XVIII (3a-c), and later sold at Christie’s New York, Fine Chinese Art from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections, 18 March 2009, lot 319.

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