Property from the Junkunc Collection
Auction Closed
September 18, 08:03 PM GMT
Estimate
20,000 - 30,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Diameter 2¼ in., 5.8 cm
Collection of Stephen Junkunc, III (d. 1978).
Modeled in the form of a feline beast, with a distinct round, almost snake-like coiled body and a lingzhi sprig in its mouth, the present piece is an exceptionally rare example of a Han dynasty weight. While no other gilt-bronze weights of this design appear to be published, several related examples of a similar form are known, such as a pair of larger gilt-bronze weights, each similarly cast in the form of a coiled feline creature with a round body, but depicted without the long mane and beard and the lingzhi in the mouth, attributed to the Western Han dynasty, exhibited in Inlaid Bronze and Related material from Pre-Tang China, Eskenazi, London, 1991, cat. no. 15.
Compare also a related gold and silver-inlaid bronze weight of a larger size, with the animal's head raised and mouth agape, attributed to the Han dynasty, from the Qing Imperial Collection, now in the Palace Museum, Beijing, published in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum. Bronze Articles for Daily Use, Hong Kong, 2006, pl. 128; and another of slightly larger size, cast with a similarly coiled body of rounded form, carved with an inscription to the underside, from the Sze Yuan Tang Collection, exhibited in The Glorious Traditions of Chinese Bronzes, Asian Civilizations Museum, Singapore, 2000, pl. 96, and later sold at Christi🀅e's New York, 16th September 2010, lot 886.