Khmer lime pot in the shape of a cat.
Mask of an Elder, 1600s, Cleveland Museum of Art: Korean Art
Size: Mask: 20.3 x 6.1 cm (8 x 2 3/8 in.)
Medium: wood with horsehair
(via met-asian)
Finial in the Form of an Apsara, ca. 12th century, Metropolitan Museum of Art: Asian Art
Samuel Eilenberg Collection, Ex Coll.: Columbia University, Purchase, Mr. and Mrs. Uzi Zucker Gift and Rogers Fund, 1987
Size: H. 4 15/16 in. (12.5 cm)
Medium: Bronze
Koma-inu: Guardian Lion-Dog, 1185-1333, Cleveland Museum of Art: Japanese Art
Placed at the entrance to shrines and temples in Japan, lion-like guardian figures warded off evil spirits. These lion-dogs are distinguishable by their faces: one looks fierce, mouth closed, while the other seems mid-roar, mouth agape. The idea of guardian-lions likely came to Japan from China via Korea, giving rise to the name koma-inu meaning “Korean dog.”
Size: Overall: 49.6 cm (19 ½ in.)
Medium: wood with traces of polychromy
(via japaneseaesthetics)
Beauty, Gion Seitoku, early 19th century, Brooklyn Museum: Asian Art
Size: Image: 22 3/8 x 15 7/8 in. (56.8 x 40.3 cm) Mount: 53 ¼ x 20 7/8 in. (135.3 x 53 cm) Width with scroll end: 22 7/8 in. (58.1 cm)
Medium: Hanging scroll, ink, color, gofun, and mica on paperhttps://www.brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection/objects/167194
(via met-asian)
Haniwa in the Form of a Shield, c. 500, Cleveland Museum of Art: Japanese Art
Haniwa (clay cylinders) topped with the form of a shield, or with a shield and quiver of arrows, appear on some tomb mounds called kofun (old mounds). There are also warriors holding a shield, their heads peeping out over the tops, or diagonally across their bodies. There are even some haniwa with a warrior’s helmet sitting at the top of the cylinder above the shield. This unusual object has a shield and quiver on the front, and the face of a warrior wearing a helmet on the reverse.
Size: Overall: 120 x 48.7 x 18 cm (47 ¼ x 19 3/16 x 7 1/16 in.)
Medium: Earthenware with applied, cut, and incised designs and red slip
(via japaneseaesthetics)