AN UNUSUAL FROG-SHAPED OPENWORK BUCKLE
AN UNUSUAL FROG-SHAPED OPENWORK BUCKLE

WESTERN HAN DYNASTY, CIRCA 3RD CENTURY BC

Details
AN UNUSUAL FROG-SHAPED OPENWORK BUCKLE
WESTERN HAN DYNASTY, CIRCA 3RD CENTURY BC
Cast as a frog as if seen from above, with tiny circles on the body, its sides being bitten by two snakes with linear decoration, their scrolling bodies framing the back legs before meeting at the hook and then terminating in coiled tails, with a loop between the front legs on the convex underside, with malachite encrustation
3¾ in. (9.6 cm.) long, box
Provenance
Acquired in Hong Kong, November 1991.
Exhibited
The Glorious Traditions of Chinese Bronzes, Singapore, 2000, no. 85.
Metal, Wood, Water, Fire and Earth, Hong Kong Museum of Art, 2002-2006.

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Lot Essay

This unusual buckle is similar to a pair illustrated by E. Bunker, "Two Snakes and a Frog, A Warring States Period Bronze Belt Buckle from Eastern Inner Mongolia", Orientations, January 1987, pp. 42-5, fig. 1, where the author notes, p. 43, that "the combined frog and double snake motif appears to have been an auspicious motif of eastern Inner Mongolia and the lower Liao River Valley". The same motif can be seen in related buckles and plaques, also illustrated, figs. 5-7.

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