Page 116 - Chinese Art From The Scholars Studio, 2015, J.J. Lally, New York
P. 116

65.  A p o l i s h e d s t o n e C e n s e r
 Early Tang Dynasty, 7th Century

 of domed shape, the thick sides rounded up to a rimless circular aperture on top encircled by four
 clusters of three vertical slots high on the sloping shoulders, the stone attractively mottled in olive-
 brown and black, polished to a high gloss on the exterior.

 Height 5 inches (12.7 cm)
 Compare the Tang straw-glazed pottery incense burner of closely related form in the Avery Brundage Collection at the Asian
 Art Museum, San Francisco, illustrated by He in Chinese Ceramics: The New Standard Guide, London, 1996, no. 127, where
 the author notes the aristocratic practice of fumigating clothing using this type of incense burner, perhaps inspired by earlier
 ritual practices.  A Sui or early Tang straw-glazed pottery figure of a court lady holding a censer of this same form, also in the
 Brundage Collection, is illustrated by He, ibid., no. 129. Compare also the Sui pottery tomb figure holding a censer of this form
 discovered near Shachang, Yubei, Anyang district, Hebei province, in the tomb of Zhang Sheng, dated to A.D. 595, illustrated by
 Tregear, Arts of China: Neolithic Cultures to the T’ang Dynasty - Recent Discoveries, Tokyo, 1968, fig. 352 (5).

 初唐 滑石薰香 高 12.7 厘米
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