A SET OF TEN JADE ORNAMENTS
A SET OF TEN JADE ORNAMENTS
A SET OF TEN JADE ORNAMENTS
2 更多
A SET OF TEN JADE ORNAMENTS

XUEJIAGANG CULTURE, CIRCA 3200-3000 BC

细节
A SET OF TEN JADE ORNAMENTS
XUEJIAGANG CULTURE, CIRCA 3200-3000 BC
The set consists of ten arc-shaped ornaments in various sizes simulating fish and other types of animals, three pierced with two apertures, the other three with just one aperture. The stones are covered extensively with white alteration.
Largest: 4 in. (10.2 cm.) long, box
来源
Acquired in Hong Kong prior to 1999
出版
Pottery and Jades of Chinas Neolithic Age, Taipei, 2001, p. 102, no. 85 (six of ten)

荣誉呈献

Priscilla Kong
Priscilla Kong

拍品专文

The stones are of exceptional fine quality, all are covered with greyish-white alteration mottled with bluish and russet speckles. Some areas are semi-translucent.

All ten irregularly-shaped pendants are carved by string-cutting tools to simulate fish, birds, or other animals as objects of worship, with cutting marks on the surfaces. Each pendant is pierced to the centre or at the end with a tiny aperture for suspension, and was probably worn exclusively by the nobles at the time.

A small quantity of similar jade carvings had been discovered at the Xuejiagang Site, Qianshan County, Anhui Province, see The Complete Collection of Jades Unearthed in China – 6 - Anhui, Beijing, 2005, p. 44 (fig. 1) and p. 45 (fig. 2); and at Gushan Tomb, Wuxue County, Jiangxi Province, see Wuxue Gushan, Beijing, 2001, p.1. Both sites are located at the middle Yangtze River valley, close to the famous Lingjiatan site where a multitude of jades had been unearthed. However, the archaeological culture sequence of these sites awaits further research.

It is very rare to find a group of these pendants. They are material evidence that help to advance the research on the various jade cultures of the middle Yangtze River valley.
(Text by Wang Mingda)

更多来自 云中玉筵 ─ 重要亚洲私人古玉珍藏 : 新石器时代篇

查看全部
查看全部