STATUE DE DIVINITE DAOISTE EN BRONZE LAQUE OR
STATUE DE DIVINITE DAOISTE EN BRONZE LAQUE OR

CHINE, DYNASTIE MING, XVIIEME SIECLE

Details
STATUE DE DIVINITE DAOISTE EN BRONZE LAQUE OR
CHINE, DYNASTIE MING, XVIIEME SIECLE
Représentée assise à l'européenne, vêtue de robes et d'un manteau souple, ses deux mains tenant le ratna et le manuscrit, le visage serein, les cheveux coiffés en chignon, parée d'une coiffe rehaussée de trois phénix ; accidents
Hauteur: 41,5 cm. (16¼ in.)
Further details
A GILT-LACQUERED BRONZE FIGURE OF A DAOIST DEITY
CHINA, MING DYNASTY, 17TH CENTURY

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Giulia Cuturi
Giulia Cuturi

Lot Essay

This goddess, known as the Sovereign of the Clouds of Dawn but also as the Lady of Mount Tai, developed relatively late in Chinese history, coming to prominence only in the early Ming dynasty. Almost immediately, she became one of the most popular deities of the northern part of China. She is closely connected with Mount Tai in Shandong province, the easternmost of the Five Sacred Peaks, and her main temple is located on that mountain. Worshiped by at least the third century B.C., Mount Tai was traditionally seen as the gateway to the afterlife. The god of Mount Tai was traditionally male, a figure of considerable severity who controlled the paths of the dead. The Sovereign of the Clouds of Dawn was believed to be his daughter. Unlike her father, she is a compassionate figure associated with life, especially childbirth. She is the yielding yin counterpart to her father's yang sternness.

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