Skip to main content
A very large pottery model of a camel and rider Tang Dynasty (3) image 1
A very large pottery model of a camel and rider Tang Dynasty (3) image 2
The Property of a Nobleman 男爵藏品
Lot 2

A very large pottery model of a camel and rider
Tang Dynasty

12 May 2016, 10:30 BST
London, New Bond Street

Sold for £21,250 inc. premium

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

How to sell

Looking for a similar item?

Our Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.

Find your local specialist

Ask about this lot

A very large pottery model of a camel and rider

Tang Dynasty
The two-hump camel modelled striding with left legs forward, neck raised and mouth gaping open to reveal tongue and teeth above the mottled hairy beard, the simple saddle modelled separately and further laden with a separate layer of travel supplies including hanging flasks, rolled blankets and rabbits, the foreign rider perched above his goods wearing a stippled fur jerkin opening to reveal a small paunch, the bearded face looking directly ahead with determined expression below the exotic peaked cap, the left arm outstretched as if to hold reins.
Overall 85cm (33 1/2in) high (3).

Footnotes

唐 陶胎彩繪胡人騎駱駝俑

Provenance: a noble European private collection

來源: 歐洲貴族私人收藏

The result of a thermoluminescence test, Oxford Authentication Ltd., No.C101z92 dated 14 November 2001, is consistent with the dating of this lot.

Handsome, imposing and exotic camels such as the present lot are of great scholarly importance as well as being highly decorative. Much of the evidence of Tang dynasty life comes from archaeological pieces from tomb excavations which bear witness to fear of death as well as a desire to recreate the lifestyle and comforts experienced in this life. Impressive beasts such as this camel, as well as horses and other figures including attendants, officials and servants, were therefore required to accompany the deceased on his journey in the afterlife.

The two-humped Bactrian camel was an exotic beast known in China from the Han dynasty, when it was first introduced as a form of tribute offered by the tribes of Turkestan and Central Asia. Prized for their ability to survive extreme hardships of heat, cold and lack of water when travelling across the desert, camels came to symbolise the freely-flowing trade established along the Silk Road and thus the wealth and cosmopolitan nature of the Tang Court. It is no coincidence that the rider of the present camel is clearly of foreign demeanour and clothing, and sits atop heavily-laden saddle bags. The rider, with his distinctive hat and fur coat, worn skin-side out, probably represents a Sogdian merchant. In addition, imperial camel herds, numbering several thousand, were used for a range of state duties, including the provision of a military courier service for the northern frontier, adding military authority to the significance of the camel.

Examples of Tang dynasty camels, both unglazed and with sancai glaze, are in important museum collections including the British Museum, Musée Guimet and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

For a comparable figure of a camel with Central Asian rider see Hao Qian, et al., Out of China's Earth: Archaeological Discoveries in the People's Republic of China, Beijing 1981, fig.241. For another related group of grey pottery camels excavated from the tomb of Dugu Sijing, dated AD 709, see Tang Chang'an chengjiao Sui Tang mu (Excavation of the Sui and Tang Tombs at Xi'an), Bejing, 1980, pls.65, 70-71.

An unglazed pottery camel with a female rider, of very similar dimensions and with similar caparisons, Tang dynasty, was sold at Sotheby's New York on 20 March 2002, lot 56, and another example with a male rider was sold in the same sale, lot 55.

Additional information

Bid now on these items

FUKUI RYONOSUKE (JAPANESE, 1923-1986) Woman in profile

A CHINESE EIGHT-PANEL SCREEN INSET WITH BLUE AND WHITE PORCELAIN PLAQUES 20th century

A CHINESE CANTON ENAMEL BOWL WITH LARGE CORAL BRANCH Late Qing dynasty

A CHINESE PAINTED GRAY POTTERY VESSEL, HU Han-style or Han with base replaced

A CHINESE QIANJIANGCAI ENAMELED PORCELAIN OVOID JAR Late Qing dynasty/Republic period

TWO CHINESE ARCHAISTIC HARDSTONE CARVINGS

A MARBLE-MOUNTED ZITAN AND MIXED WOOD STORAGE BOX Late Qing/Republic period

TWO CHINESE SNUFF BOTTLES 18th-19th century

A CHINESE INSIDE-PAINTED GLASS SNUFF BOTTLE Ye Family Studio, 1916

A CHINESE INSIDE-PAINTED ROCK CRYSTAL SNUFF BOTTLE Ye Family Studio, 1927

A CHINESE INSIDE-PAINTED GLASS SNUFF BOTTLE Ma Family, dated 1900

Bonhams logo

Bonhams logo