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LOT 0063

CHINESE MING DYNASTY GLAZED POTTERY HORSE AND RIDER

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Ca. 1368-1644 AD. Ming Dynasty. Ceramic Horse with Rider. An elegant ceramic figurine depicting a grey horse in a standing pose with its neck stretching forward and its tail loose, over one hind quarter. The horse's trappings, including the bridle and breastplate, saddle blanket, and breeching are molded in the round and coloured in dark green. The rider is shown dressed in period-typical garb with the tunic painted orange and blue, holding a green vessel. Horses were an important status symbol in ancient China. These animals were brought to China via the Silk Road and were considered a luxury good. As such horses were a sign of wealth among the elite, and there were strict laws which restricted the ownership of horses to people of elevated rank. In fact, soldiers serving in China's military had to provide their own mounts indicating that only the richest members of society could serve in the cavalry. This exceptionally well-preserved terracotta is part of a long tradition of horse statuettes in China, and in fact, the earliest known example of a stirrup, today a mainstay of equestrianism, was found on another Chinese statue of a horse from Hunan province, dated to AD 302. Provenance:Provenance: From an old British collection formed in the 1990s, formerly acquired in the UK and European Art Market.; Size: L:335mm / W:280mm ; 2.2kg

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02 May 2021
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Ca. 1368-1644 AD. Ming Dynasty. Ceramic Horse with Rider. An elegant ceramic figurine depicting a grey horse in a standing pose with its neck stretching forward and its tail loose, over one hind quarter. The horse's trappings, including the bridle and breastplate, saddle blanket, and breeching are molded in the round and coloured in dark green. The rider is shown dressed in period-typical garb with the tunic painted orange and blue, holding a green vessel. Horses were an important status symbol in ancient China. These animals were brought to China via the Silk Road and were considered a luxury good. As such horses were a sign of wealth among the elite, and there were strict laws which restricted the ownership of horses to people of elevated rank. In fact, soldiers serving in China's military had to provide their own mounts indicating that only the richest members of society could serve in the cavalry. This exceptionally well-preserved terracotta is part of a long tradition of horse statuettes in China, and in fact, the earliest known example of a stirrup, today a mainstay of equestrianism, was found on another Chinese statue of a horse from Hunan province, dated to AD 302. Provenance:Provenance: From an old British collection formed in the 1990s, formerly acquired in the UK and European Art Market.; Size: L:335mm / W:280mm ; 2.2kg

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Time, Location
02 May 2021
UK, London
Auction House
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