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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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142

Jade monster mask with bi disk

Height 18.2 (7'/ 8 ), width 13.8 (5'A),

depth 0.7 ('A)

Western Han Dynasty, second century BCE

From the tomb of the King of Nanyue at Xianggang,

Guanzhou, Guangdong Province

The Museum of the Western Han Tomb of the

Nanyue King, Guangzhou, Guangdong Province

The large monster face of this jade supports a

disk to form a door handle. 1 (Such handles were

employed on furniture as well as buildings.) This

example is unusual in being made of jade, although

a similar jade monster face with a fitting for a

ring (but lacking the ring itself) was found in the

vicinity of Maoling in Xingping county, Shanxi

province. 2

Both jades resemble an earlier famous bronze

piece from Yi county in Hebei province on which

two felines in high relief weave in and out of the

surface of the face (similar creatures embellish the

ring). The three-dimensional effects of the bronze,

however, give way in this jade to flattened scrolling

representations of the horns or crest of the beast;

an elegant openwork feline creature flanks the right

side of the face and was, perhaps, balanced on the

left by another (now lost); a bi disk with a pattern

of small relief knobs substitutes for the ring of the

bronze.

Both the bronze and the jade recall the famous

taotie faces that were common in the Shang and

Early Western Zhou periods (fifteenth to tenth

centuries BCE) but diminished in importance during

the Late Western Zhou period and the Spring

and Autumn period (ninth to seventh centuries

BCE), only to reappear somewhat abruptly in the

fifth to sixth centuries BCE on numerous mold and

model fragments found at the Jin state foundry at

Houma in Shanxi province. A fragmentary model

for a bell (Beijing 1993, fig. 72) shows the design

on one of the most magnificent of the decorated

remains. This mask would appear to be a revival

of the ancient taotie, but details suggest otherwise:

tigerlike stripes decorate the nose of the central

420 EARLY IMPERIAL CHINA

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