A PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE WATER BUFFALO AND BOY GROUP
JADE AND HARDSTONE CARVINGS THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN
A PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE WATER BUFFALO AND BOY GROUP

18TH/19TH CENTURY

Details
A PALE GREENISH-WHITE JADE WATER BUFFALO AND BOY GROUP
18TH/19TH CENTURY
Well carved as a boy seated beside a recumbent water buffalo as he tries to raise the buffalo by pulling on the long rope which trails from the ring in the buffalo's nose, loops over one horn, crosses the back and continues under the body, the pale greenish-white stone with soft polish
3½ in. (8.9 cm.) long

Lot Essay

One of the favorite images of the rural idyll depicted by Chinese painters such as Li Tang (1050-after 1130) shows a small boy either riding or leading a water buffalo. A painting by Li Tang, Herd Boy with Water Buffalo and Calf, in the National Palace Museum, Taipei is ilustrated by A. B. Wicks (ed.) in Children in Chinese Art, Honolulu, 2002, p. 54, fig. 2.6. This became a theme seen in small jade carvings of the Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties. Two such carvings, where the boy either lies on or is beside the recumbent water buffalo which has a rope through its nostrils, like the present carving, are illustrated by James C.Y. Watt, Chinese Jade from Han to Ch'ing, The Asia Society, New York, 1980, p. 66, nos. 47 and 48.

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