Page 475 - The Golden Age of Chinese Archaeology: Celebrated Discoveries from the People’s Republic of China
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outspread wings; their sweeping tails feature en-
graved "eyes" and cusped outlines. Four scrolling
stems issue from the central point, two of them held
in the peacocks' beaks and ending in flowers, and
two passing behind their tails. The remaining space
between this circular design and the sides is occu-
pied by five double-sprays with leaves and flowers.
The legs, with identical animal masks, have out-
turned trifoliate feet instead of animal claws; the
same shape, but carved in wood and elegantly
painted, is to be found a century or more earlier,
in an offering tray preserved in the Shoso-in. 6
The festoons, in the form of knotted scarves with
intricate parcel-gilding, have a central four-petaled
flower instead of the embroidered ball used above.
They hang from split pins passing through gilt
floral washers inside and outside the rim of the
tray. Three small rivets fasten each of the legs to the
underside of the tray, carefully positioned so as to
be almost hidden in the foliage. RW
1 Excavated in 1987 (FD 5:002; FD 5:075); unreported.
See Shaanxi 19883,1-26.
2 Han 1995, 71.
added. The tray has five lobes and a tightly folded 3 A complete example of a five-legged censer and stand
ribbon design inside the rim, the latter almost in Yue stoneware (height 66 [26]) was excavated near
Hangzhou in 1980. See Wang 1996, pi. 15.
identical to a border pattern used at Dunhuang in 4 Tokyo 1998!}, 77, no. 40.
the eighth century in Cave 45.* The center is very 5 Zhongguo shiku: Dunhuang Mogaoku, 3: pis. 135 -136.
effectively incised and gilded (without the use 6 Nara 1998, no. 65.
of repousse) with a pair of peacocks circling with
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