Coco Li
Sale Coordinator, Chinese Works of Art
US$60,000 - US$80,000
Sale Coordinator, Chinese Works of Art
Global Head, Business Strategy, Chinese Paintings
Vice President and Head of Department
Senior Specialist
Global Head, Chinese Paintings and Calligraphy
Junior Specialist/Cataloguer
唐 白大理石坐獅
Provenance:
Purchased directly from J.T. Tai in the 1980's
來源:
1980年代購自戴潤齋
The moderately realistic yet dynamic pose, typical of the mature Tang sculptural style in the 7th/8th century at the height of Tang dynastic power, must have been the result of the appearance of 'real' lions for the first time in China. Though not indigenous to the country, lion imagery had appeared along the silk routes via the vehicle of Buddhism, sometime in the 4th Century CE, and depicted in Buddhist paintings and cave temples, often flanking the lower registers of Buddha images. Real lions, however, were brought to the Tang imperial court at Changan as tribute gifts. Perhaps the most acclaimed instance was the arrival of a lion from Samarkand in the year 635 CE for the emperor Taizong. So impressed was he, that he ordered one of his highest-ranking advisors, Yu Shinan, a renowned poet and calligrapher, to write a rhapsody in honor of the animal.
A similarly modeled but smaller white marble lion was sold at Christie's New York, 24 September 2020, The James and Marilynn Alsdorf Collection, Part II, lot 908. See also an example in the Metropolitan Museum of Art from the 1950 Bequest of Mary Stillman Harkness, accession no. 50.145.330 and illustrated on the website; another white marble lion in the collection of the Royal Ontario Museum, illustrated on the museum's website, object number 933.12.4; and another offered by J. J. Lally & Co., Oriental Art, Ancient Chinese Tomb Sculpture, New York, March 22 - April 10, 2004, no. 10.