Bronze, Western Han (206
BCE
- 8
CE
)
This censer has a conical, removable cover with a pattern of swirling, pointed waves which is cast in openwork. The bowl has three raised-line borders encircling the waist, and is held high by a phoenix with an upraised beak and tail as well as outstretched wings all bearing incised details. The bird stands atop the back of a turtle resting on a flat circular dish with an everted rim. The flat dish served to catch the ashes. (Source: Weisbrod, http://www.weisbrodltd.com/createpg.cgi?ctlgcode=14&pagenum=13 )
Earthenware, Western Han
(Source: Chinese antique porcelain, http://www.artcn.net/ca/cap/ataoqi094.jpg )
Bronze, Eastern Han (25 - 220
C.E.
)
(Source: Kostiner Far Eastern Art, http://www.trocadero.com/jonkostiner/items/67562/en1.html )
Earthenware with relief decoration, remains of pigment,
(Source: Valenstein, Suzanne G. A Handbook of Chinese Ceramics (NY: The Metropolitan Museum of Art; 1975, 1989), B&w Fig. 39 and pg. 39.)
Four Han Dynasty Hill-Censers.
(Source: Laufer, Berthold Chinese Pottery of the Han Dynasty (Leiden: E.J. Brill, Ltd., 1909; 1962 reprint by Charles E. Tuttle Co., Inc.), PLATE LV, pg. 183, with descriptions pp. 183-187. |
|
|
Bronze censer in the shape of Mount Bo
Eastern Han Dynasty (1st-2nd century
C.E.
)
14 cm H, 11.75cm D
Northern China.
(Source: Asian Art Outlook,
http://www.askasia.org/features/AsianArt/slideshow10.htm#.
|
|
Light-Blue Glazed Pottery Coiled Dragon Incense Burner,
Sui Dynasty (581-618
C.E.
)
Funerary object, 49 cm H, 27 cm W, 6.0 Kg,
unearthed at LuoYang, Henan Province, in 1976.
(Source: Chinese Dynasty Antique Co., Ltd.,
http://cgi.ebay.com/Light-Blue-Pottery-Coiled-Dragon-Boshan-Incense-Burner_W0QQitemZ220072868966QQcmdZViewItem,
ebay Item number: 220072868966, 08/12/2007.
|
Compare the Korean National Treasure Baekje Incense Burner (above),
gilt-bronze from
the early 7th century
C.E.
(64 cm H, excavated in 1994, Neungsan-ri, Buyeo county in South Chungcheong Province)
with the
Chinese Prince Liu Sheng boshanlu,
bronze inlaid with gold from the 2nd century
B.C.E.
(26 cm H, excavated in 1968, Mancheng, Hebei).
The distance between the two excavation sites is approx. 2100 km,
mostly across the Gulf of Chihli and the Yellow Sea.
If the Chinese object was buried some seven hundred years before the Korean one was,
what was the Korean
craftsman (men?)'s inspiration and model?
What influence did Chinese artisans or collectors in Korea have in the piece's
construction?
("...specimens existed among the antiquities collected during the
Tang and Song,
but the boshanlu were no longer said to be made by that time." Stein, pg. 42)
(Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Baekjeincenseburner.JPG;
http://www.seoulselection.com/weekly_book_info_view.html?bid=272
)
|
|