Page 109 - JJ Lally Ancient Chinese Jades, 1988
P. 109

95.  A Jade Dragon Plaque F ragment
 Warring States Period, 5th–4th Century B.C.
 boldly carved in profile and fully detailed on both sides, the head with blunt horn, large staring
 eyes, open jaws and incised teeth, the body with raised comma-spirals and fine linear details, the
 surface polished to a high gloss all over, the translucent stone of pale green and olive tone.
 Length 3¾ inches (9.3 cm)

 Ex Eskenazi, Ltd., London, acquired October, 1991
 Compare the pair of large jade tiger plaques in the Freer Gallery of Art, illustrated by Lawton, Chinese Art of the Warring States
 Period: Change and Continuity, 480–222 B.C., Washington, D.C., 1982, p. 149, no. 96.
 ኷਷cᎲҖ͗भಞ΁cڗ 9.3᩶Ϸc

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  96.  An Archaic Jade Disc ( Bi )

 Eastern Zhou Dynasty, 4th–3rd Century B.C.
 well carved on both sides with raised comma-spiral shape ‘sprouting grain’ motifs within narrow
 plain wedge-shaped borders, the pale green translucent stone with a band of dark brown shading
 to creamy tan color, the surface highly polished.

 Diameter 2¾ inches (7.1 cm)
 Compare the similar jade disc in the collection of the Palace Museum, Beijing, illustrated in Gugong bowuyuan cangpin daxi:
 yuqi bian (Compendium of Collections in the Palace Museum: Jade), Vol. 3, Spring and Autumn and Warring States Period,
 Beijing, 2011, p. 93, no. 89.

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