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Lamp with 16 Branches in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, July 2017

Lamp with 16 Branches in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, July 2017
Lamp with Sixteen Branches

Object Details

Period: Eastern Han dynasty (25–220)

Culture: China

Medium: Earthenware with pigment

Dimensions: H. 43 5/16 in. (110 cm); Diam. of base: 14 3/4–15 3/8 in. (37.5–39 cm)

Classification: Ceramics

Credit Line: Lent by Henan Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology
This lamp, one of the most elaborate Han examples of its kind, takes the shape of a tree with sixteen branches. The branches follow two prototypes: one has a crane, and the other, a winged immortal riding a dragon. A gigantic turtle in the lowermost basin carries the trunk on its back. (Both the turtle and the crane were Han symbols of longevity.) Three figures and twenty-five animals populate the mountain-shaped base, whose surface is painted with clouds. The clouds suggest a place high above the human world, thus transforming the lamp into a land of immortality—appropriate imagery for a funerary object such as this.


Text from: www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/640947

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