Mirror with Jade Disk Inset

Description

Mirrors with a jade disk inset are perhaps the rarest of all known bronze mirrors in China. This object's conception was unquestionably aristocratic, and it was meticulously and exquisitely crafted. Aided by the skillful carving of its surface, the nephrite here exhibits a subtle luminosity. The disk features within the inner circle a pair of phoenixes and in the outer ring a set of four oxen masks having extended and interlocking horns-motifs often seen in jades of the late Warring States period and early Western Han dynasty. Consequently, this mirror has been dated to that span of time.

Provenance

(Delicate House - Chinese Curios, Hong Kong, ?-2002, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art) (?-2002); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH, 2002-present (2002-)

Mirror with Jade Disk Inset

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475 BCE–9 CE

Accession Number

2002.5

Medium

bronze with nephrite and turquoise

Dimensions

Diameter: 15.3 cm (6 in.)

Classification

Metalwork

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Gift of various donors to the department of Chinese art (by exchange)