Coco Li
Sale Coordinator, Chinese Works of Art
Sold for US$40,695 inc. premium
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新石器時代 紅山文化 珍罕青玉冠形飾
Provenance:
James Freeman, 1998
來源:
James Freeman舊藏,1998年
It is extremely rare to see a piece of Hongshan jade carving of this quality and size. The choice of the stone and the execution of this brilliant form exemplifies the sophistication of Hongshan jades.
Compare the shield-form jade ornament, similarly curved and ribbed, excavated from the Niuheliang site, illustrated by Xiaoneng Yang (ed), The Golden Age of Chinese Archaeology: Celebrated Discoveries from the People's Republic of China, Washington, 1999, p. 94, no. 19, noted by the author that "more recent publication places it on the tomb occupant's upper arm."
Compare also the curved and ribbed ornament from the Winthrop Collection, now in the collection of the Harvard Art Museum, illustrated by Jenny F. So in Early Chinese Jades in the Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, 2019, pp. 74-75, no. 1, with an enlarged photo on p. 16. The attribution of the Harvard example became possible because of the excavations of the Niuheliang site (3500-3000 BCE), a burial and sacrificial center in the late Hongshan period, well-preserved with a rich variety of artifacts. So further noted, op. cit., "Objects made with this fine-grained nephrite are rare, even in early northeastern contexts."
Please note that the dating of this item is revised to Hongshan Culture or later.