Description
He Xiangu is one of the Eight Immortals in the Daoist pantheon. She was thought to have been a real person who lived in the Tang dynasty, originally named He Qiong. As a teenager, she was instructed in a dream to eat powdered mica to become immune from death and to vow to remain unmarried. She did so and became an enlightened practitioner of Daoism.
In this delicate carving, He Xiangu is placidly seated in a gnarled and knotty wooden raft amid green-tinted ivory waves. In front of her rests a bamboo basket filled with objects associated with Daoist immortality, and she holds a branch of lingzhi fungus like an oar.
In this delicate carving, He Xiangu is placidly seated in a gnarled and knotty wooden raft amid green-tinted ivory waves. In front of her rests a bamboo basket filled with objects associated with Daoist immortality, and she holds a branch of lingzhi fungus like an oar.
Provenance
(Tokyo Gallery Limited, London, England, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art) (?–1976); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1976–)
Accession Number
1976.60.a
Medium
Boxwood
Dimensions
Overall: 13.5 cm (5 5/16 in.)
Classification
Wood
Credit Line
Severance and Greta Millikin Purchase Fund