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Harvard University Art Museums Website | Preface

Tomb Sculptures

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Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Harvard University Art Museums
Physical location: 485 Broadway, Cambridge, MA 02138
Mailing address: 32 Quincy Street, Cambridge, MA 02138

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Associated in traditional (and even present-day) China with death and burial, rather than with art, and almost unknown outside China before the late nineteenth century, Chinese ceramic funerary sculptures came to world attention over the course of the twentieth century, brought to light by chance discovery and controlled excavation alike. By this time, virtually everyone interested in art recognizes Tang horses and camels, and the life-sized terracotta warriors from the trenches surrounding the tomb of Qin Shi Huangdi (r. 221210 B.C.), the first emperor of the Qin dynasty (221206 B.C.). Most collectors of Chinese tomb sculptures have specialized in the brilliantly colored sancai, or "three-color," glazed examples from the Tang dynasty (618907). By contrast, Tony Solomon has taken a much more comprehensive view, acquiring funerary sculptures from the Han (206 B.C.A.D. 220) through the Tang dynasties.
(from the Preface by Robert D. Mowry)


all text & images © Arthur M. Sackler Museum
(click on the small image for full screen image with caption.)

  Kneeling Female Figure
Kneeling Female Figure
  Three Capped Men
Three Capped Men
  Armor-Clad  Warrior
Armor-Clad Warrior
  Standing Camel
Standing Camel
  Two Standing, Braying Camels
Two Standing, Braying Camels
  Standing male figures
Standing male figures
  Bearded Male Figure
Bearded Male Figure
  Equestrian Figures
Equestrian Figures
  Court Lady
Court Lady
  Guardian Warriors
Guardian Warriors
  Ox and Two-Wheeled Carriage
Ox and Two-Wheeled Carriage
  Guardian Warrior
Guardian Warrior

all text & images © Arthur M. Sackler Museum
Asianart.com | Exhibitions
Harvard University Art Museums Website | Preface