A WELL-CARVED BEIGE AND BROWN JADE FIGURE OF A RECUMBENT WATER BUFFALO
A WELL-CARVED BEIGE AND BROWN JADE FIGURE OF A RECUMBENT WATER BUFFALO
A WELL-CARVED BEIGE AND BROWN JADE FIGURE OF A RECUMBENT WATER BUFFALO
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A WELL-CARVED BEIGE AND BROWN JADE FIGURE OF A RECUMBENT WATER BUFFALO

SONG-YUAN DYNASTY (AD 960-1368)

Details
A WELL-CARVED BEIGE AND BROWN JADE FIGURE OF A RECUMBENT WATER BUFFALO
SONG-YUAN DYNASTY (AD 960-1368)
The figure is shown with the legs tucked beneath the body, the head raised and slightly turned to one side and the tailed flicked to up onto the rump. The stone is of a warm beige tone with fine veining and areas of brown to the underside.
3 ¼ in. (8.3 cm.) long, cloth box
Provenance
Malcolm Barnett, The Kirknorton Collection, Hong Kong.
Anthony Carter, London, 12 July 2000.
The LJZ Collection, United States.
Literature
B. Morgan and Li Boqian, Naturalism & Archaism: Chinese Jades from the Kirknorton Collection, London, 1995, no. 22.
A. Carter, The LJZ Collection of Chinese Jades, London, 2022, pp. 18-19, no. 4.
Exhibited
London, Carter Fine Art Ltd., Naturalism & Archaism: Chinese Jades from the Kirknorton Collection, 1995.

Brought to you by

Vicki Paloympis (潘薇琦)
Vicki Paloympis (潘薇琦) Head of Department, VP, Specialist

Lot Essay

The relaxed, naturalistic pose of the present water buffalo is similar to that of another jade figure illustrated by Jessica Rawson, Chinese Jade from the Neolithic to the Qing, British Museum, 1995, pp. 370-71, no. 26.14, where it is dated Song dynasty or later. The naturalism of the pose can be compared to that of two stone paper weights in the shape of mythical, horned animals shown in a reclining position with heads raised that were found in a Southern Song tomb at Zhejiang Zhuji xian, p. 356, fig. 10. Water buffaloes were not highly represented in the repertoire of pre-Ming jade carvings, but may have become more popular during the Song and Yuan dynasties when ceramic and bronze water droppers in the shape of a water buffalo were popular. See, for example, the Longquan water dropper dated 13th-14th century illustrated in Jenny F. So, Chinese Jades from the Cissy and Robert Tang Collection, Art Museum, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2015, p. 183, fig. 37.2.

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