Figure of a standing man China, Western Zhou period, 10th century BC |
Jade figure of a standing man Small carvings of human figures were made intermittently during the Neolithic period in China, but apart from a few figures from the tomb of Fu Hao, the consort of a Shang-dynasty king, and other royal tombs, there are almost no human images from central China in the Shang period (about 1500-1050 BC). Figures from the Western Zhou (1050-771 BC) are equally rare, and they may also have been a product of renewed contact with the south of China which resulted in the use of human-like figures, in combination with birds, as surface decoration. This figure has a large round and rather flat face, with eyes, eyebrows,
a rounded nose and a small mouth. The man's hands are folded in front
of him, and he wears a robe hanging in folds from the waist, with a
long 'knee-cover' below the hands. The manner in which the garment hangs
below the man's hands has prompted scholars to include this figure within
a small group that has been dated to the Western Zhou, following the
finding of such a figure in a Western Zhou tomb in the eastern suburbs
of Luoyang. |
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