I-Hsuan Chen
Senior Specialist
Sold for US$16,575 inc. premium
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漢 白玉臥虎蓆鎮殘件
In Han dynasty China, people customarily sat on the floor with finely woven mats layered under their feet. Weights were made in sets of four to place at corners of the mat, often in crouching animal form with rounded edges - so as not to catch the delicate silk robes worn by nobles. It is extremely rare to find a mat weight made of jade. In most cases they are cast in bronze and decorated with gilding and elaborate inlays of gold, silver, and gemstones to indicate social status.
Use of a white jade mat weight was recorded in Chu ci (Songs of Chu), a collection of music and poetry from the southern kingdom of Chu, describing the residence of the Lady of the Xiang 白玉兮為鎮 疏石蘭兮為芳 - "use mat weights made of white jade, fragrant the space by sparsely dotting the shi-orchids."
Compare the closely related white jade coiled feline in the Robert H. Ellsworth Collection and exhibited at the Asia Society, New York, illustrated by Watt in the catalog Chinese Jades from Han to Ch'ing, New York, 1980, p. 41, no. 10.