Page 30 - Chiense Silver and Gold, 2012, J.J. Lally, New York
P. 30

10.  A Large P arcel-Gilt Silver Dish
                 Tang Dynasty, A.D. 8th–9th Century

                 of shallow circular form with gently rounded flaring sides resting on a wide ring foot, decorated in
                 very low relief in the center with a floral roundel in the form of a continuous scrolling vine bearing
                 three blooms alternating with three large leaves encircling a single bloom from the same vine
                 in the center, all drawn in outline with a strong chased line and picked out in gilding, with finely
                 incised linear details, the mouth with a raised half-round border around the inner rim also picked
                 out in gilding, the underside plain, the ring foot made separately and soldered on, with some bright
                 green patination at the join where the solder has corroded, inscribed on the base with a single
                 character yong (詠) which may be translated as “to sing praise of,” and with other incised symbols
                 including a triangle with two lines forming an acute angle at the apex and associated angular and
                 curved lines clustered near the footrim.
                 Diameter 9 ⁄2 inches (24.1 cm)
                           1
                 Compare the smaller parcel-gilt silver dish of the same shape, with a similar raised half-round border around the inner
                 rim, decorated with a gilded tiger motif at the center in low relief, excavated from Lijiayingzi, Aohan Banner, Chifeng,
                 Inner Mongolia and now in the Inner Mongolia Museum, illustrated in  Chifeng jinyinqi (Important Archaeological Sites
                 for Excavated Gold- and Silverware in Chifeng Region), Huhehaote, 2006, p. 34, no. CJ021, described as Tang period but
                 Sogdian workmanship.
                 Compare also a smaller Tang parcel-gilt silver dish of lobed form decorated with a similar parcel-gilt floral roundel in the
                 center, discovered at Qujiangchi, in the southern suburbs of Xi’an, Shaanxi province, now in the Xi’an City Cultural Relics
                 Management Authority, illustrated in Zhongguo wenwu jinghua dacidian: jin yin yushi juan (The Compendium of Chinese Art:
                 Gold, Silver, Jade and Stones), Hong Kong, 1994, p. 110, no. 71.

                 唐 鎏金折枝串花紋銀盤 徑 24.1 厘米
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