Skip to Content

A RARE LARGE GOLD AND SILVER-INLAID LACQUERED BRONZE MIRROR
- TANG DYNASTY (618-907)

Contemporary, modern and old century works of art at auction for buyers and collectors at Christie’s auction house

View, register and bid for sales

A RARE LARGE GOLD AND SILVER-INLAID LACQUERED BRONZE MIRROR
TANG DYNASTY (618-907)
Estimate
(Set Currency)
    $20,000 - $30,000

Sale Information

Sale 2389
property from the arthur m sackler collections
14 September 2009
New York, Rockefeller Plaza




Lot Description

A RARE LARGE GOLD AND SILVER-INLAID LACQUERED BRONZE MIRROR
TANG DYNASTY (618-907)
Of circular form, the back covered in black lacquer inlaid with three large silver flower sprays alternating with gold birds in flight above gold lotus motifs and silver leaves, all interspersed with further leaves, butterflies and foliate motifs; together with two small silver-backed octalobed bronze mirrors, Tang dynasty, both silver-sheet backs executed in repoussé on a fine ring-punched ground, one with lions and birds amidst leafy scrolling vines, the other with three birds in flight between foliate stems; all with some malachite green encrustation
8 3/8 and 2 7/16 in. (21.3 and 6.2 cm.) across, box (3)


金銀錯青銅鏡

Lot Condition Report
I confirm that I have read this Important Notice and agree to its terms.
Saleroom Notice

Please note that the two smaller mirrors are octolobe and not quatrelobe.

Provenance

All: J.T. Tai & Co., New York; first 1974, second and third 1966.

Exhibited

Second: Art of the T'ang Dynasty and its Antecedents, Low Memorial Library, Columbia University, New York March, 1967, no. 31.

Lot Notes

Mirrors of this type, with their rich combination of gold and silver decoration on a lacquer ground set into the back of the bronze mirror, reflect the splendor and sumptuous taste of the Tang court. Mirrors similar to the present example found their way to Japan at an early date, such as the eight-lobed mirror in the Shoso-in, illustrated by Ryochi Hayashi, The Silk Road and the Shoso-in, New York/Tokyo, 1975, p. 129, fig. 142. Another similarly decorated eight-lobed mirror is illustrated in Zhongguo Meishu Quanji (The Great Treasury of Chinese Fine Arts), vol. 8, Arts and Crafts - Lacquerware, Beijing, 1989, p. 80, no. 78.

Post-Lot Text

See illustration of first

Department Information
Keywords