View full screen - View 1 of Lot 3601. A celadon jade oblong pendant, Neolithic period, Hongshan culture | 新石器時代紅山文化 青玉瓦溝紋器.

Property from an Important Japanese Collection | 日本顯赫收藏

A celadon jade oblong pendant, Neolithic period, Hongshan culture | 新石器時代紅山文化 青玉瓦溝紋器

Auction Closed

October 9, 10:57 AM GMT

Estimate

50,000 - 70,000 HKD

Lot Details

Description

Property from an Important Japanese Collection

A celadon jade oblong pendant,

Neolithic period, Hongshan culture

日本顯赫收藏

新石器時代紅山文化 青玉瓦溝紋器


9.2 cm

Susan Chen & Company, Hong Kong, 1993.


奉文堂陳淑貞,香港,1993年

Flourished in the Northeast regions of present-day Inner Mongolia, Liaoning and Hebei, Hongshan Culture (c. 4500-3000 BC) produced jades, which are distinctive in style, characterised by smoothly polished and softly rounded surfaces that appeal to the haptic sense. They include both figurative and abstract items, such as the present piece which is minimally adorned with subtle grooves.


A similar oblong pendant was unearthed at Aohanqi, Inner Mongolia, illustrated in Zhongguo chutu yuqi quanji / The Complete Collection of Jades Unearthed in China, vol. 2: Inner Mongolia, Liaoning, Jilin, Heilongjiang, Beijing, 2005, pl. 32; and a further late Hongshan culture oblong pendant was discovered in the tomb of Fu Hao, illustrated in King Wu Ding and Lady Hao: Art and Culture of the Late Shang Dynasty, Taipei, 2012, cat. no. III-3.


Compare also ornaments similarly decorated with parallel grooves, such as an excavated armlet, illustrated in Niuheliang: excavation Report on a Hongshang Culture Site (1983-2003), Beijing, 2012, no. N3M9:2, vol. 3, col. pl. 190, together with a cloud-shaped ornament, vol. 3, col. pl. 321.4. A related grooved armlet from the Winthrop Collection in the Harvard Art Museums is illustrated in Jenny F. So, Early Chinese Jades in the Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, Mass., 2019, pl. 1.