CLUB-SHAPED ORNAMENT
Jade. Late Neolithic period, Hongshan culture, ca.4700-2900 BC
???? - ????, ???35??-?30??
? 8.1 ??
This pendant belongs to a category of Hongshan ornaments known in Chinese literature as gou or bing -hook or handle-shaped ornaments. They invariably have an elongated form with a hole drilled at one of the extremities and a hook-shaped form at the other, a shape which recalls the protrusions often seen on Hongshan ‘hookedcloud’ ornaments. Two small notches separate the ‘handle’ of the pendant from the hooked protrusion, whose surface is marked by fine grooves. The suspension hole is slanted and drilled from one side only of the pendant. The translucent light-green jade is polished to a high lustre and has virtually no inclusions.
A similar pendant excavated from a Hongshan culture site in the Chifeng district, Right Bairin Banner, Inner Mongolia, is published in Yang Boda, Zhongguo meishu quanji: yuqi (Chinese works of art series: jade) vol.9, Beijing 1986, no.4; two other comparable pendants in the collections of the Liaoning Provincial Museum are reproduced in Mou Yongkang, Zhongguo yuqi quanji - 1 Yuanshi shehui (Chinese Jades: Vol.1, Early Societies), Shijiazhuang 1993, nos.8-9. Another similar pendant has been excavated from the tomb of Fu Hao of the late Shang period, Anyang (ca.1250 BC) and is illustrated in Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Yinxu yuqi (Jades from Yinxu), Wenwu Chubanshe, Beijing 1981, no.28
This jade is published in Filippo Salviati, Mysterious Jades of Ancient China, Edition
Zacke 2014.
LENGTH 8.1 cm
From an Austrian private collection
Starting price: 1,500
CLUB-SHAPED ORNAMENT
Jade. Late Neolithic period, Hongshan culture, ca.4700-2900 BC
???? - ????, ???35??-?30??
? 8.1 ??
This pendant belongs to a category of Hongshan ornaments known in Chinese literature as gou or bing -hook or handle-shaped ornaments. They invariably have an elongated form with a hole drilled at one of the extremities and a hook-shaped form at the other, a shape which recalls the protrusions often seen on Hongshan ‘hookedcloud’ ornaments. Two small notches separate the ‘handle’ of the pendant from the hooked protrusion, whose surface is marked by fine grooves. The suspension hole is slanted and drilled from one side only of the pendant. The translucent light-green jade is polished to a high lustre and has virtually no inclusions.
A similar pendant excavated from a Hongshan culture site in the Chifeng district, Right Bairin Banner, Inner Mongolia, is published in Yang Boda, Zhongguo meishu quanji: yuqi (Chinese works of art series: jade) vol.9, Beijing 1986, no.4; two other comparable pendants in the collections of the Liaoning Provincial Museum are reproduced in Mou Yongkang, Zhongguo yuqi quanji - 1 Yuanshi shehui (Chinese Jades: Vol.1, Early Societies), Shijiazhuang 1993, nos.8-9. Another similar pendant has been excavated from the tomb of Fu Hao of the late Shang period, Anyang (ca.1250 BC) and is illustrated in Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Yinxu yuqi (Jades from Yinxu), Wenwu Chubanshe, Beijing 1981, no.28
This jade is published in Filippo Salviati, Mysterious Jades of Ancient China, Edition
Zacke 2014.
LENGTH 8.1 cm
From an Austrian private collection
Aufrufpreis: 1.500
The auctioneer will charge 1 % of each bid (even unsuccessful) in favour of the charity project (Burma convent).
Bidders cannot personally attend this sale.(silent auction).
Due to the DIRECTIVE 2011/83/EU OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL of 25 October 2011 on consumer rights (see https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:32011L0083&from=EN), consumers have the right of withdrawal.
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