An amber- and straw-glazed red pottery figure of a Bactrian camel
Christie's charges a Buyer's premium calculated at… 顯示更多
An amber- and straw-glazed red pottery figure of a Bactrian camel

TANG DYNASTY

細節
An amber- and straw-glazed red pottery figure of a Bactrian camel
Tang Dynasty
The braying camel standing foursquare with raised head, the body predominantly amber-glazed with straw-glazed splashed areas, restored
54 cm. high
注意事項
Christie's charges a Buyer's premium calculated at 23.205% of the hammer price for each lot with a value up to €110,000. If the hammer price of a lot exceeds €110,000 then the premium for the lot is calculated at 23.205% of the first €110,000 plus 11.9% of any amount in excess of €110,000. Buyer's Premium is calculated on this basis for each lot individually.

拍品專文

The Bactrian camel was not indigenous to China, see Ezekiel Schloss, Ancient Chinese Ceramic Sculpture, Stamford, 1977, vol. II, p. 220, where he discusses the importation of thousands of camels from the states of the Tarim Basin, eastern Turkestan and Mongolia. The Tang state even created a special office to supervise Imperial camel herds which carried out various assignments, including military courier service for the Northern Frontier. The camel was also used by the court and merchants for local trasportation and, of course, were the 'ships' of the desert, linking China to the oasis cities of Central Asia, Samarkand, Persia and Syria. Unlike the horse, which enjoyed ethereal associations in China, the camel, though appreciated for its endurance and strength, was a difficult animal, usually left to barbarians to attend to. Most figures that ride camels, or once attended them, are foreigners.

The result of the Brussels Art Laboratory thermoluminescence test ref.: DAT/Rogg/2000 (347/829) is consistent with the dating of this lot.