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Jade rhyton
From China
Qing dynasty, 18th-19th century AD
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Jade
rhyton
Copying an ancient form
This cup takes the form of the traditional horn-shaped rhyton in China.
It stands vertically on a flat, narrow base, widening to an uneven lip.
An inscription is carved around the inside of the lip. The outside surface
is carved with wave-like scrolls, where sea creatures frolic, carved
in bold relief. The lower half of the cup is held in the mouth of a
fish or dragon, whose tail twists up along the side of the cup.
The rhyton is a shape imported from Western or Central
Asia. Jade examples were introduced to China during the Han dynasty
(206 BC - AD 220), when Western luxuries were popular at court. A rhyton
from the tomb of the king of Nan Yue (around 122 BC) is a well-known
example. His tomb contained a great many jades, many collected from
earlier periods. |
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