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          PROPERTY FROM THE HEI-CHI COLLECTION       東周戰國時期   白玉曲體龍鳳珮
          A SUPERB WHITE JADE S-SHAPED ‘DRAGON AND
          PHOENIX’ PENDANT                           出版:
          EASTERN ZHOU DYNASTY, WARRING STATES       姜濤及劉雲輝,《熙墀藏玉續》,北京,2012年,頁64
          PERIOD
          well worked from a translucent white stone, the thick S-shaped
          pendant skilfully rendered to depict a sinuous dragon with its
          coiled body detailed with spiral bosses and terminating in a
          phoenix head
          6.9 by 12.5 cm, 2¾ by 4⅞ in.

          LITERATURE
          Jiang Tao and Liu Yunhui, Jades from Hei-Chi Collection II,
          Beijing, 2012, p. 64.

          HK$ 400,000-600,000
          US$ 52,000-77,500
          Exquisitely carved as an S-shape dragon terminating in a
          phoenix head, the present piece is notable for its powerful
          sinuous form and outstanding material. Dragon-shaped jades
          made a sudden appearance among the range of jades used
          in pendant sets in the 5th century BC. By the 4th century BC,
          dragon pendants of this type were popular and often made
          as the bottommost components in the configuration of ritual
          ornaments of the nobility (Jenny F. So, Early Chinese Jades in
          the Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, 2019, pp. 210-213).
          Despite its popularity, dragon pendants of comparable quality,
          however, are extremely rare. Compare three related examples,
          each of an S-shaped silhouette comprising of a dragon and a
          bird on each end, preserved in the Harvard Art Museums and
          illustrated in Jenny F. So, op.cit., cat. nos 25A-25C. See also
          a reticulated jade pendant, carved as a sinuous dragon with
          an upturned snout and further decorated with three phoenix
          heads, excavated from a Chu tomb in Jiuliandun, Zaoyang,
          Hubei, included in the exhibition Phoenix Reborn: Zeng and
          Chu Jades Excavated from Hubei, Art Museum, The Chinese
          University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, 2018, cat. no. 59.


























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