Page 79 - Chiense Silver and Gold, 2012, J.J. Lally, New York
P. 79

36.  An Openwork Gold Plaque
 Eastern Jin Dynasty (A.D. 317– 420)

 depicting a winged figure riding on a striding dragon surrounded by scroll motifs and enclosed within
 a linear frame of shield shape, the gold sheet embellished with rows and clusters of granulation
 throughout, laid over a thin bronze backing with two very small apertures for mounting at the
 margin on opposite sides.

 Width 1 ⁄8 inches (3.5 cm)
 3
 A very similar gold ornament excavated in 1979 from a 4th century tomb in southern Jiangsu province, now in the Nanjing
 Museum, is illustrated by Watt in the catalogue of the special exhibition organized by the Metropolitan Museum of Art
 entitled China: Dawn of a Golden Age, 200–750 AD, New York, 2004, p. 111, no. 10, where the author refers to a pair of gold
 plaques of this form and design in the Musée Guimet, each attached to a bronze backing, illustrated by Delacour in De
 bronze, d’or et d’argent: Arts somptuaires de la Chine, Paris, 2001, pp. 245–247.
 Another very similar gold ornament excavated in 1955 from Meijiashan, Nanjing, Jiangsu province and now in the Nanjing
 Museum, is illustrated in Jinse jiangnan: Jiangsu gudai jinqi (Golden Jiangnan: Ancient Gold Ware of Jiangsu), Nanjing, 2008,
 pp. 46–47, attributed to the Western Jin dynasty (A.D. 265–317).
 Compare the pair of small gold ornaments of this type in the Muwen Tang Collection, illustrated by Kwan in Chinese Gold
 Orna ments, Hong Kong, 2003, pp. 296–297, no. 151. Compare also the two similar small gold ornaments illustrated by
 Gyllensvärd and Scott in  Kinesiskt Guld och Silver I Carl Kempe-Samlingen  (Chinese Gold and Silver in the Carl Kempe
 Collection), Ulricehamn, 1999, p. 57, no. 17 and p. 59, no. 19.
 東晉 金箔羽人騎龍牌飾 寬 3.5 厘米
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