CHAMEAU ET PERSONNAGE EN TERRE CUITE POLYCHROME
CHAMEAU ET PERSONNAGE EN TERRE CUITE POLYCHROME
CHAMEAU ET PERSONNAGE EN TERRE CUITE POLYCHROME
CHAMEAU ET PERSONNAGE EN TERRE CUITE POLYCHROME
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歐洲私人珍藏
唐 陶駱駝及陶俑 一組兩件

CHINE, DYNASTIE TANG (618-907)

細節
唐 陶駱駝及陶俑 一組兩件
Hauteur : 35,5 cm. (14 in.) et 46,5 cm. (18 ¼ in.)
來源
1985年3月22日購自古董商戴克成Oriental Bronzes Ltd., 倫敦
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A PAINTED POTTERY CAMEL AND A PAINTED POTTERY MALE FIGURE
CHINA, TANG DYNASTY (618-907)

榮譽呈獻

Tiphaine Nicoul
Tiphaine Nicoul Head of department

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拍品專文

The Tang dynasty stands as one of the most artistically vibrant periods in China's history. Its arts are renowned for their diversity, cosmopolitan designs, and the remarkable technical skill demonstrated in their production, as seen in this pottery example. In the early Tang period, leading up to the An Lushan Rebellion in 756 AD, the lavish lifestyles of the court and elite spurred the creation of a wide variety of top-quality goods. As China thrived through trade along the famed Silk Road, camels became vital for transporting goods. These impressive animals, capable of carrying heavy loads over long distances and surviving days without water, earned the title 'ships of the desert' due to their large, broad feet that prevented them from sinking into the sand. Many camels were imported from the Tarim Basin, Eastern Turkmenistan, and Mongolia, primarily the Bactrian camel breed. The Tang government even established an office dedicated to overseeing their breeding and use.
See a magnificent sancai-glazed camel with a foreign attendant from the same collection, sold at Christie's Hong Kong on 30 November 2016, lot 3305, for HKD 4,620,000. For comparison, note a closely related and finely painted pottery figure of a Bactrian camel with a rider from the Chin Hua Tang collection, sold at Christie's Hong Kong on 29 November 2017, lot 2919, for HKD 6,100,000.

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