On view

Asian Art
Huo Pavilion
Christina Lee Gallery

Coffin Box Panel: Gentlemen Attendants,

10th–early 11th century

Chinese
Liao dynasty, 907–1125
2020-17
After the fall of the Tang dynasty in 907, a new regime arose in northeastern Asia. Ruled by the Yelü clan of the seminomadic Khitan (Ch. Qidan 契丹) people, the Liao dynasty controlled present-day Mongolia, eastern Russia, northern Korea, and northern China. Wealthy Liao families adopted a range of Chinese cultural practices, including the construction of richly decorated under-ground tombs. In these funerary panels, the figures, clouds, and distant terrain recall the style of earlier Tang- dynasty paintings. The figures, however, are unmistakably Khitan. The men sport typical Liao hairstyles, with long locks in front of each ear, and several wear Liao-style boots. The hybrid features of the paintings suggest that the panels were painted for a Liao patron located near the empire’s southern border with Song-dynasty territory, in the present-day northern China provinces of Inner Mongolia and Liaoning.

Information

Title
Coffin Box Panel: Gentlemen Attendants
Dates

10th–early 11th century

Medium
Wood with lacquer-based pigment over slip
Dimensions
67 × 89.5 × 2 cm (26 3/8 × 35 1/4 × 13/16 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Lloyd E. Cotsen, Class of 1950
Object Number
2020-17
Place Made

Asia, China

Culture
Period
Materials

–2000 Christie’s (New York, NY); sold to Lloyd E. Cotsen (Los Angeles, CA), Mar. 21, 2000.
–2020 Cotsen 1985 Trust (Los Angeles, CA), by gift to the Princeton University Art Museum, 2020.