A LARGE AND RARE PAINTED GREY POTTERY FIGURE OF A FEMALE DRUMMER
A LARGE AND RARE PAINTED GREY POTTERY FIGURE OF A FEMALE DRUMMER
A LARGE AND RARE PAINTED GREY POTTERY FIGURE OF A FEMALE DRUMMER
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小夢樓珍藏
唐 擊鼓仕女陶俑

TANG DYNASTY (AD 618-907)

細節
唐 擊鼓仕女陶俑
14 1⁄8 in. (35.8 cm.) high, lacquer softwood stand, Japanese wood box
來源
山中商會,日本,1935年前
小夢樓珍藏,日本
出版
《Exhibition of Chinese Art》山中商會,倫敦,1935-6年,編號30
《東瀛遺珠;山中商會及日本舊藏名窯瓷器》,北京,2020年,頁44-5,編號1
展覽
倫敦,山中商會,Knoedler’s Galleries, London,「Exhibition of Chinese Art」,1935年12月-1936年1月

榮譽呈獻

Rufus Chen (陳嘉安)
Rufus Chen (陳嘉安) Head of Sale, AVP, Specialist

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拍品專文

Music and dance were highly popular at the Tang court, and the costumes and coiffures of these musicians and dancers reflect the fashion for women during the Tang dynasty. Contemporary pottery figures depict court ladies with various instruments, as well as in dancing poses. The present figure is unusual in being shown standing, as musicians are more often shown seated or in kneeling poses. For two painted pottery kneeling female musicians see J-P. Desroches, Compagnons d’éternité, Paris, 1996, pp. 154-155. The present figure is also distinguished by her delicately rendered face, and the elegant manner in which she holds the hourglass-shaped drum, with her hands concealed by the long sleeves.

The stance and dress of the present figure, with the hair pulled back in a single knot and the long, high-waisted robe and upturned shoes, is similar to Tang-dynasty sancai-glazed figures, sometimes shown with the hands held at front and holding a bird. An example of this type from the collection of L. Wannieck, Paris, was sold at Christie’s New York, 18 December 2014, lot 717.

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