View full screen - View 1 of Lot 126. A mottled jade pendant in the form of a stylised bird, Shang/early Western Zhou dynasty | 商/西周初 青玉鳥珮.

Formerly in the Collection of Dr. David Ho (1911-1986)

A mottled jade pendant in the form of a stylised bird, Shang/early Western Zhou dynasty | 商/西周初 青玉鳥珮

Auction Closed

November 3, 05:23 PM GMT

Estimate

3,000 - 5,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

Formerly in the Collection of Dr. David Ho (1911-1986)

A mottled jade pendant in the form of a stylised bird

Shang/early Western Zhou dynasty

商/西周初 青玉鳥珮


the flattened plaque with curved outlines carved as a bird depicted in profile in a perched position with his legs drawn up, plumed and crested and with a hooked beak, drilled with two holes for suspension, the stone a mottled celadon colour

Height 8.3 cm, 3¼ in.

Dr. David Ho (Chinese name Ho Hangchi 何昌熾) was born in Kanton in 1911. His father was a well-known dentist in Nanjing who counted Chiang Kai-shek among his patients. David Ho pursued an illustrious career in International Law. He first studied political sciences at the University of Shanghai (1930-1932) followed by comparative and international law studies at Suzhou University. After moving to France, in 1941 he obtained a PhD in law from the University of Paris. In 1962 he joined the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple in London. From 1949 until his retirement in 1971, David Ho worked as a legal officer at the United Nations Secretariat in New York. He relocated to Geneva in 1971 where he and his wife lived until his death in 1986. 


Interested in Chinese history and art, David Ho was particularly fascinated by objects that were inscribed. His extensive archive and research suggest that it was during his time in New York that he began collecting and researching Chinese artefacts.

The carving is unfinished on both sides, with only a curved groove to the lower part of the body defining the torso and legs. Similar pendants carved in the form of crested birds have been excavated, the most prominent examples include two from the tomb of Fu Hao in Anyang, Henan province, illustrated in Yinxu yuqi, Beijing 1982, pls. 44 and 57. Compare with a similarly shaped, unfinished jade pendant, sold in Christie's Hong Kong, 28th November 2018, lot 2726.