Rikcha:Dragon Pendant, Eastern Zhou dynasty or Warring States period, c 4th 3rd century BC.jpg

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"These matching pendants were designed as serpentine dragons with backturned heads, coiled tails, and small fins that project above and below their undulating trunks. The rhythmic fluency of these creatures belies the unyielding quality of jade—a compact, fine-grained stone that cannot be carved and must be worn away with abrasive paste applied to its surface with saws, grinders, and drills. The craftsman’s remarkable dexterity with this intractable material is displayed in smoothly rounded, heart-shaped units and delicately incised spirals, striations, and cross-hatching that thoroughly enliven both the front and back surfaces. Their substantial size and thickness, technical refinement, and glossy polish point to aristocratic patronage. That these pendants were likely designed to drape down the owner’s shoulders or from a waistband is indicated by holes pierced for suspension through the creatures’ hindquarters. Toward the end of the Bronze Age when these pendants were created, sinuously curved dragons had become prominent motifs in many luxurious materials. Contemporary literature suggests that such dynamic creatures were not merely decorative but also envisioned as supernatural beings. When buried with the deceased, jade pendants like these may have reflected widely held beliefs in the dragon as a vehicle that could transport the human soul on its journey to the netherworld."

-- Art Institute of Chicago
P'unchaw 400 BC – 200 BC
Técnica Jade
Dimensiones 8.6 × 16.5 × 0.6 cm. (6-1/2 × 3-3/8 × 1/4 in.)
Art Institute of Chicago
Número de inventario
1950.641
Lugar de creación China during the Eastern Zhou or Warring States period (c. 480–221 BC)
Adquisición Edward and Louise B. Sonnenschein Collection
Pukyu/rikcha hap'iq Dragon Pendant. Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago.
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CC0 Public Domain Designation

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Este archivo, el cual fue publicado originalmente en https://www.artic.edu/artworks/70117/dragon-pendant, fue revisado el 27 January 2019 por el revisor Leoboudv, quien confirmó que en esa fecha estaba disponible bajo la licencia indicada.
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kunan19:42 29 hul 202319:42 29 hul 2023-pa musuqchasqanmanta uchuylla rikchacha3000 × 1500 (591 kB)User-duckCropped 35 % vertically using CropTool with lossless mode.
02:24 16 ini 201902:24 16 ini 2019-pa musuqchasqanmanta uchuylla rikchacha3000 × 2296 (622 kB)Cold Season{{Artwork |artist = |author = |title = |description = "These matching pendants were designed as serpentine dragons with backturned heads, coiled tails, and small fins that project above and below their undulating trunks. The rhythmic fluency of these creatures belies the unyielding quality of jade—a compact, fine-grained stone that cannot be carved and must be worn away with abrasive paste applied to its surface with saws, grinders, and drills....

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