Page 28 - Sothebys HK Dragon Emperor April 2024
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3609

             PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT JAPANESE COLLECTION  商初 或二里頭文化   青銅嵌綠松石牌飾
             A RARE TURQUOISE-INLAID BRONZE PLAQUE,     來源:
             EARLY SHANG DYNASTY, POSSIBLY ERLITOU      懷古堂,紐約,1996年9月21日
             CULTURE
             13 cm                                      展覽:
                                                        《懷古堂》,紐約,1996年,編號56
             PROVENANCE
             Kaikodo, New York, 21st September 1996.
             EXHIBITED
             Kaikodo Journal, New York, 1996, cat. no. 56.

             HK$ 300,000-400,000
             US$ 38,400-51,500





             Carefully set with hand-cut tesserae of turquoise in a stylised
             zoomorphic pattern, this piece belongs to an extremely rare
             group of inlaid bronze plaques. To date, only three plaques
             of this type have been excavated from the archaeological
             site at Erlitou in Henan Province, with around seven more
             in museum collections around the world. Found only in the
             most lavish tombs lying atop or alongside the deceased with
             other valuable ritual objects, these plaques are believed
             to have been possessions of elite ritual practitioners. For
             example, a related plaque, recently exhibited at the Shanghai
             Museum, was excavated in 1984 alongside extraordinary
             objects such as jade blades and a bronze bell with a jade
             clapper; another Erlitou turquoise-inlaid plaque, one of only
             two to have come up at auction, was exhibited at Eskenazi
             Ltd., Inlaid Bronze and Related Material from Pre-Tang China,
             London, 1991, cat. no. 68, and sold at Christie’s Hong Kong,
             3rd June 2015, lot 3201.
             Turquoise inlaid plaques of this type vary somewhat in form
             and design; the present piece being slightly longer in shape
             and with a more abstract design than other known examples.
             This piece is also the only known example with triangular
             openwork and three mouth-like designs along its central
             axis. Moreover, while other known plaques have four eyelets
             cast along their perimeter, the present piece incorporates
             these holes into the main body of the plaque. What unites
             all of these plaques, however, is the presence of two round
             turquoise eyes. Likely predecessors of the taotie motif of
             the Shang dynasty, these imposing beady eyes would have
             been a fearsome sight to behold when strapped to the arm
             or chest of the practitioner. Though the specific meaning of
             this stylised beast has long since been lost to history, pieces
             of this kind clearly played an important role in the traditions
             of this ancient civilisation.








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