A RARE AND FINELY CARVED WHITE JADE FIGURE OF A MYTHICAL BEAST
A RARE AND FINELY CARVED WHITE JADE FIGURE OF A MYTHICAL BEAST
A RARE AND FINELY CARVED WHITE JADE FIGURE OF A MYTHICAL BEAST
2 更多
T. EUGENE WORRELL珍藏中國玉器
宋至明或以前 白玉瑞獸

SONG-MING DYNASTY (AD 960-1644) OR EARLIER

細節
宋至明或以前 白玉瑞獸
2 1⁄4 in. (5.7 cm.) long
來源
莫士撝, 水松石山房珍藏
藍理捷, 紐約, 2005年10月26日
出版
香港大學美術博物館, 《玲瓏玉雕: 玉人, 玉獸, 玉飾》, 香港, 1995年, 頁139, 編號115
展覽
香港, 香港大學美術博物館, 「玲瓏玉雕: 玉人, 玉獸, 玉飾」, 1995年12月9日-1996年2月6日
‌夏洛茨維爾, Worrell家族藝廊, 2005-2022年

榮譽呈獻

Rufus Chen (陳嘉安)
Rufus Chen (陳嘉安)

拍品專文

As Jenny So notes in “The Functions of Jade Animal Sculptures in Ancient China,” Chinese Jade Animals, Hong Kong, 1996, p. 30, beginning in the Han dynasty jade animal sculptures “figured as an integral part of the daily lives of their owners and admirers”. So explains, “With their colourful mythological and philosophical associations, it would be easy for these sculptures to capture the imagination of the educated gentleman and become a prized element of his interior furnishings. Like the miniature gardens of the Tang dynasty, a single or a select group of jade animals in the home could evoke an idyllic world where one could escape from the burdens of everyday life.”

The present figure, with its compact, muscular round body squatting on four strong limbs, exemplifies the type of small jade carvings of mythical beasts that enjoyed popularity from the Han dynasty onwards. Several jade figures of this type are illustrated in Chinse Jade Animals, op. cit., including two identified as chimera, pp. 78-9, nos. 43 and 44, and dated Han dynasty and possibly Western Han dynasty, respectively, as well as a carving of a tiger and bear, pp. 82-3, no. 48, which is dated to the Han dynasty and carved from a white stone with russet brown areas. The paws and claws of the tiger and bear are similar to those on the present figure, and the head of the tiger is also heavily stylized and has a blunt, straight jaw.

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