Selection of Ming Dynasty Heads

£ 175.00

A selection of Chinese heads from the Ming Dynasty. These male and female heads are part of a detachable attendant statuette. Each are finely moulded to display typical hairstyles/ hats of the Ming period. The facial features have been rendered in a naturalistic manner with black pigment outlining the eyes, eyebrows and facial hair on the males along with red pigment for the lips. Pigment is also visible across the hair, hats and headpieces. The heads have been mounted on a custom-made stand.

PRICED INDIVIDUALLY. All measurements and weights include the stand.

Date: Circa AD 1368–1644
Period: Ming Dynasty
Condition: Very fine condition, loss of some of the pigment and encrustation to the surface consistent with age.

Grave goods were an important status symbol in ancient China, so the affluent and important would be accompanied in their travels through the afterlife with numerous depictions of people, items and animals. Such terracotta figures were made for the service and entertainment of the owner, ensuring that their journey in the underworld was a happy one. It was believed that these figures would serve and assist the deceased in the afterlife. Figures of this type are called mingqi (冥器) in Chinese, and usually depict servants, officials, soldiers, musicians, court attendants, dancers and, in the case of animals, horses and Bactrian camels. As in life, attendant figures are depicted standing nearby, waiting to fulfil the desires and needs of the deceased. The Ming dynasty played host to some of China’s most renowned artistic achievements – famed, of course, for its vases, but also works such as Shen Zhou’s ‘Lofty Mount Lu’. The culture’s artistic explosion can be in part explained by the Ming dynasty’s economic success.

To discover more about Chinese terracotta statuettes, please visit our relevant blog post: Terracotta Tomb Attendants

Weight N/A
Dimensions cm
Choice of item

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Culture

Pottery and Porcelain

Region

Reference: For a similar item,The University of Michigan, item 2.105A&B

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