A RARE BRONZE 'BIXIE' WEIGHT
A RARE BRONZE 'BIXIE' WEIGHT

HAN DYNASTY (206 BC-AD 220)

细节
A RARE BRONZE 'BIXIE' WEIGHT
HAN DYNASTY (206 BC-AD 220)
The heavy, circular mat weight is well cast on top in openwork with three winged, free-standing bixie striding around a central dome below a mountain peak, their heads turned outward and their jaws open, with traces of gilding remaining.
2¾ in. (7.1 cm.) diam., fitted wood box, wood stand
来源
Acquired in Japan, late 1990s.
出版
Kandai no Bijitsu (Art of the Han Dynasty), Osaka Municipal Museum, 1974, p. 39, no. 2-192.
展览
Osaka Municipal Museum, Kandai no Bijutsu, Japan, 27 April - 26 May 1974, no. 2-192.

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拍品专文

Weights of this type are believed to have been used to hold down the corners of mats used for seating, and would have been made in sets of four. A similar bronze weight in the Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Harvard University Art Museums, is illustrated by Michelle C. Wang et al. in A Bronze Menagerie: Mat Weights of Early China, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, 2006, p. 107, no. 11, where it is dated Han dynasty, and where the author discusses the relationship of mountains and animals during the Han period. Another similar weight is illustrated in Ancient Chinese Arts in the Idemitsu Collection, 1989, no. 239, and one of a pair from the collection of the Korean Government is illustrated in the catalogue of the International Exhibition of Chinese Art, London, 1935-36, no. 421. One from the David-Weill Collection was sold at Sotheby's London, 29 February 1972, lot 52, and another from the collection of S.E. Monsieur Jean Daridan, 11 December 1979, lot 50.

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