On view
Asian Art
Huo Pavilion
Christina Lee Gallery
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
Type
–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.
–2020 Cotsen 1985 Trust (Los Angeles, CA), by gift to the Princeton University Art Museum, 2020.