A BRONZE ‘TIGER’ WEIGHT
A BRONZE ‘TIGER’ WEIGHT

HAN DYNASTY OR LATER

Details
A BRONZE ‘TIGER’ WEIGHT

HAN DYNASTY OR LATER
The circular weight is cast as three tigers with their heads turned over their backs and leaning against a central mountain, all supported on a circular platform.

2 ¾ in. (7 cm.) diam., 550g, Japanese wood box
Provenance
Hirano Kotoken, Tokyo, prior to 2000

Literature
Oishii ocha kokonotsu no hiden, Tokyo, 2000, p. 8

Lot Essay

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. Compare three gilt-bronze weights dated to the Han dynasty nearly identical in style in the Harvard Art Museum, object number: 1943.52.43.A; and two bronze weights in the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C., one dated to the Han dynasty and very similar to the present weight in the style of casting, see accession number: S2012.9.2180, and another example dated to the Western Han dynasty with parallel indented lines on the bodies of the animals and an inscription above a key-fret band on the circular platform, see accession number: S2012.9.2296. Compare also a similar Han-dynasty bronze weight sold at Christie’s New York, 18-19 September 2014, lot 1009.

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