Phoenix Bird Form Plaque, one of a pair

Minneapolis Institute of Art

Phoenix Bird Form Plaque, one of a pair

China

Date
1st century BCE -1st century CE
Medium
Gilt bronze
Department
Asian Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

These two gilt birds, probably intended to depict a male and female phoenix, display their wings in a lively dancing pose and hold pearls in their beaks. The body and wings are covered with finely detailed feather markings under traces of green corrosion. Considered to be auspicious symbols, phoenixes like these have appeared in Chinese art since the late Shang dynasty (c. 13th century BCE – 1046 BCE). During the mid-Western Zhou dynasty in the 10th century BCE, the phoenix was even praised and likened to the Zhou King himself. While these mythical beings continued to appear in tomb paintings and other art forms during the Han dynasty, gilt bronze examples like this are quite rare. The three fangs cast into the back of each plaque suggest that they were affixed to a larger object and might have served as architectural embellishments. China, Asia

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