Jade headdress ornament China, Yuan or early Ming dynasty, 14th-15th century AD |
Jade headdress ornament This is an exceptionally well carved example of a type of headdress ornament that was made in a variety of sizes; this one is among the largest. Many Chinese of this period wore their hair on top of their head and crowned the arrangement with a jade ornament of this type. However during the last imperial dynasty of China, the Qing dynasty (1644-1911) men wore their hair in a plait and such head ornaments were no longer used. Many of them were subsequently converted into knobs for lids of bronze vessels. A powerful coiled dragon emerges from the top of the complex
openwork carving, supported on a curved plain underside, which is pierced
by two pairs of holes. The body of the creature is embellished with
deeply incised lines; a pearl is clasped in its claws. Its uplifted
head crowns a convoluted composition in which the dragon body is entwined
among cloud tendrils.
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