Western Han Dynasty, 2nd – 1st Century B.C.
finely cast as three slender dragons with their serpentine bodies entwined in an openwork pattern of four wide circular spirals each centered by an inlaid turquoise boss, the central dragon’s body silvered and the other two dragons richly gilded, the hook formed by the extended neck and horned head of the larger gilded dragon, the claws and heads of all the dragons clearly delineated, the underside centered with a silvered button of mushroom shape for attachment.
Length 8 5⁄8 inches (21.8 cm)
Provenance J. J. Lally & Co., New York, 1991
A gilded and silvered openwork belthook of this rare form with jade inlays in the collection of the British Museum, received in 1945 as part of the Raphael Bequest, is illustrated by Watson, Ancient Chinese Bronzes, Rutland, 1962, pl. 86b. The same belthook is illustrated again by Rawson, Chinese Bronzes: Art and Ritual, London, 1987, p. 92, no. 39-b.
西漢 銅鎏金銀鑲土耳其石鏤空龍形帶鈎 長 21.8 厘米
Western Han Dynasty, 2nd – 1st Century B.C.
Length 8 5⁄8 inches (21.8 cm)