Page 19 - Sothebys HK Dragon Emperor April 2024
P. 19

3605

 PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT JAPANESE COLLECTION
 A LARGE JADE CEREMONIAL BLADE,
 NEOLITHIC PERIOD
 Japanese wood box
 42.4 cm

 PROVENANCE
 Collection of Yoshio Kojima, Tokyo.
 Acquired from the above in 1994.

 HK$ 800,000-1,200,000
 US$ 103,000-154,000

 新石器時代   玉刀
 來源:
 小島義雄收藏,東京
 1994年購自上述來源










 With three apertures along the upper edge and a fourth on
 one side, this large ceremonial blade would likely have been
 bound to a wooden handle which decomposed long ago. The
 ancient jade, however, still remains. Of warm brownish tone
 with a rich patina across its surface, this blade combines
 the Neolithic forms of knife and tablet into an object of ritual
 power.
 Related ceremonial blades with subtle differences in shape
 and in their pierced holes have been discovered in several
 jade-working Neolithic cultures. See, for example, one
 from the Longshan culture, excavated from Lushanmao
 site, Yan’an, Shaanxi province, now in the Yan’an Institute
 of Cultural Relics and Archaeology, with a slightly curved
 cutting edge, four complete and three half holes, published
 in The Complete Collection of Jades Unearthed in China,
 vol. 14: Shaanxi, Beijing, 2005, pl. 8. Two blades from other
 cultures are in the collection of the Harvard Art Museums,
 Cambridge, Massachusetts, both illustrated in Jenny F.
 So, Early Chinese Jades in the Harvard Art Museums, New
 Haven, 2019, cat. nos 6B and 6C. The former (accession
 no. 1943.50.47), attributed to the Shenmu culture, has a
 dark amber brown tone and three similarly sized holes in a
 linear arrangement. The latter (accession no. 1943.50.32),
 attributed to the Qijia culture, drilled with four holes and a
 fifth one close to the short side, has an opaque mottled grey
 colour.





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