A CELADON AND BROWN JADE GROUP OF TWO BUFFALOS AND TWO BEES

Details
A CELADON AND BROWN JADE GROUP OF TWO BUFFALOS AND TWO BEES
17TH/18TH CENTURY

Carved in the round with the recumbent larger buffalo with its head turned to the left, a leading rein through its nose and trailing under its body, two bees on its haunches and a smaller buffalo to the left side, the underside strongly carved to show the buffalos' legs, the stone of pale celadon tone with extensive pale russet areas and a smooth, even polish
3 1/8in. (8cm.) long, box
Exhibited
Pacific Asia Museum, 1986, Catalogue, no. 101
San Antonio Museum of Art, 1986
The Dayton Art Institute, 1989, no. 207, pl. 23

Lot Essay

Rawson in Chinese Jade from Neolithic to Qing, observes that few jades were carved in the form of buffaloes prior to the Ming dynasty. She suggests that "a vogue for pastoral imagery" might have stimulated the carving of buffaloes, which continued through the Ming and into the Qing dynasty.

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