A FINELY CARVED YELLOW AND RUSSET JADE FIGURE OF A RECUMBENT BACTRIAN CAMEL
A FINELY CARVED YELLOW AND RUSSET JADE FIGURE OF A RECUMBENT BACTRIAN CAMEL
A FINELY CARVED YELLOW AND RUSSET JADE FIGURE OF A RECUMBENT BACTRIAN CAMEL
2 更多
南宋/明 十三至十五世紀 黃玉駱駝

SOUTHERN SONG-MING DYNASTY, 13TH-15TH CENTURY

細節
南宋/明 十三至十五世紀 黃玉駱駝3 ½ in. (8.9 cm.) long, cloth box
來源
Bluett & Sons, 倫敦, 1980年代初
Anthony du Boulay (1929-2022) 珍藏, 英國多塞特郡
Anthony Carter, 倫敦, 1993年7月5日
LJZ珍藏, 美國
出版
A. Carter,《The LJZ Collection of Chinese Jades》, 倫敦, 2022年, 頁22-23, 編號6

榮譽呈獻

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

拍品專文

Camels are part of the Chinese repertoire of animals that are typically depicted in a seated or resting position. Associated with the opening of the Silk Road during the Han dynasty, they became popular during the Tang dynasty when pottery representations of camels either standing or seated were included amongst the figures that were placed in tombs. They subsequently enjoyed popularity again under the Mongols of the Yuan dynasty.

A yellow jade camel of comparable size (10.2 cm.) and dated to the Song dynasty is illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum - 41 - Jadeware (II), Hong Kong, 1995, p. 68, pl. 58. As with the present figure, the head is turned to the side and the body is softly contoured. A light green and brown jade camel of comparable size (9.5 cm.) but shown with head raised and facing forward, in the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, Stockholm, is illustrated by Jessica Rawson in “Chinese Jade throughout the ages”, T.O.C.S., vol. 40, 1973-75, p. 83, no. 249, where it is dated Song dynasty. See, also, the white jade camel shown in a similar recumbent position with head turned illustrated by Jessica Rawson in Chinese Jade: From the Neolithic to the Qing, London, 1995, p. 369, no. 26:12, where it is dated Song dynasty or later.

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