Page 220 - Deydier VOL.2 Meiyintang Collection of Chinese Bronses
P. 220

205.   Gilt bronze mat weight
                      Western Han dynasty, 206 bc. - 9 ad.
                      西漢時期鎏金獸形鎮
                      Height: 6 cm, Length: 10 cm


                      Gilt  bronze mat weight  cast in the  shape  of a mythical   Provenance:
                      animal with  its  back made  of a cowrie  shell.  The gilt     ▪ Gisèle Croës, Brussels, Belgium.
                      bronze animal’s powerfully  built  body  is supported  by
                      four short legs. The beast’s proportionally small head is   Exhibited:
                      finely cast with deeply set, glaring eyes, a powerful feline     ▪ Light for the After-Life, selected objects, exhibited at
                      nose  with sharply  incised  nostrils, long, large, pointed   the International Asian Art Fair -  New York, Gisèle
                      ears and a pair of long horns running along its back from
                      the centre of the top of its head to almost half the length   Croës, 2000, catalogue p. 66 - 67.
                      of its stocky body.
                                                                         Published:
                                                                           ▪ Croës  G.,  Light  for  the After-Life,  selected objects,
                                                                           Brussels 2000, catalogue p. 66 - 67.

                                                                         Similar examples:
                                                                           ▪ Gilt bronze mat weights in the shape of other animals
                                                                           (deer, turtle, mythical animals) are illustrated  by
                                                                           Wang M.C., Lai G.L, Streckx R., Wang E.Y., A Bronze
                                                                           Menagerie: Mat Weights of Early China, Boston 2007,
                                                                           p. 19 no. 2, p. 98 cat. 8, p. 99 fig b and p. 100 fig. c.

                                                                         Notes:
                                                                           ▪ Such mat weights may have accompanied their owners
                                                                           both during and after their lives.
                                                                           ▪ Such weights were used to hold down the corners of
                                                                           a mat.
                                                                           ▪ They seem to have been made in sets of four.

























































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