Warrior; China, Han Dynasty, 202 BC-220 AD.
Polychrome... Lot 10
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Warrior; China, Han Dynasty, 202 BC-220 AD.
Polychrome terracotta.
It presents restoration in fracture lines located on the arms and waist.
Measurements: 50.5 x 16 x 8.5 cm.
Round figure made in terracotta, representing a standing warrior, showing his weapons (now lost), looking straight ahead and with a serene face. It is decorated with cold-applied engobes in various colours, mainly white and orange for the clothes, brown, pink for the flesh tones, black and red.
The Han dynasty ruled China between 206 BC and 220 AD, more than four centuries during which the political, social and economic structures of China were consolidated, leading the country into the most glorious period of its history. The art of this period is still predominantly funerary, although it reflects the very high artistic level that would be reached in both the capitals and the provinces. These preserved objects provide us with information about the daily life and customs of the time, as the art becomes much more mundane than the bronzes of the Zhou and Shang periods. The structures of the tombs also changed: the Shang tombs were vertical, while the Han tombs were built in the form of underground palaces. They were decorated with reliefs stamped with scenes from the life of the deceased, and a new material, lacquer, was introduced as an artistic medium. The most famous today, however, is Han pottery production, made of terracotta and decorated with cold-applied engobes, mainly black and red.
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