A RARE BRONZE 'CELESTIAL' MIRROR
PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF RONALD W. LONGSDORF
宋 唐玄宗遊月宮圖銅鏡

SONG DYNASTY (960-1279)

細節
宋 唐玄宗遊月宮圖銅鏡
來源
Ronald W. Longsdorf, no. 1240

榮譽呈獻

Nick Wilson
Nick Wilson

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拍品專文

A very similar larger example (21.5 cm. diam.) in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum is illustrated by R. Kerr, Later Chinese Bronzes, London, 1990, p. 94, fig. 76, where she relates the narrative to the fabled excursion of the Tang Xuanzong emperor (r. 712-756). The emperor, a Daoist follower, dreamed of visiting the Moon Place where he met the moon goddess Chang E. In the design, he is shown in the centre of the bridge. The dragon underneath is associated with water and emperors, and the hare on the side is associated with the moon. This kind of pictorial design echoes the narrative theme popular in contemporaneous ink paintings. Two shaped mirrors with the same subject are also illustrated, op. cit., fig. 77. Another similar circular mirror is in the Beijing Palace Museum. See Bronze Articles for Daily Use, The Complete Collection of the Treasures of the Palace Museum, Beijing, 2006, pl. 196.

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