Chinese Nephrite Jade Carving of a Cicada on a Bamboo Stem, Possibly Ming Dynasty or Earlier

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~ Chinese Nephrite Jade Carving of a Cicada on a Bamboo Stem, Possibly Ming Dynasty or Earlier ~

A boldly carved jade object depicting a cicada perched upon a section of bamboo stalk. The composition is carved from a single stone, the bamboo stalk serving as a naturalistic base for the insect above. The bamboo is rendered as an elongated, slightly flattened cylinder with characteristic joint rings (jié 節) carved at intervals along the length, and the segment ends are hollow in the manner of natural bamboo. The cicada crouches across the upper surface of the bamboo, its wings folded back along the body with incised venation detail, its large compound eyes flanking the rounded head, and its forelegs gripping the bamboo. Further incised detail represents the segmented abdomen beneath the wings.

The stone is a pale cream to yellowish-white nephrite showing strongly differentiated surface character across the piece: areas of fine waxy polish and translucency (particularly evident at the bamboo sections in image 8) coexist with areas of significant surface alteration showing a matte, chalky, or calcified quality consistent with mineral transformation over a long period of burial or deposition. The darker amber/brown inclusions and black spots visible throughout are natural features of the stone. Image 7, showing the piece held in hand, clearly reveals this complex surface and also exposes a notable structural crack running through the body of the piece that must be examined carefully in person.

The piece has no suspension hole and was intended as a desk object or handled piece (bǎo wán) for scholarly appreciation. 

Historical Context

The jade cicada is one of the oldest and most symbolically potent forms in Chinese jade carving, with a documented history stretching back over three thousand years. A white jade cicada of Han dynasty date was offered at Bonhams, described as of flattened form, cut with sweeping strokes to form the winged insect, with simply delineated head and eyes and traces of calcification, consistent with long burial history. The cicada's association with transformation, resurrection, and immortality in Chinese culture derives from its life cycle, emerging from the earth after years underground in what the Chinese viewed as a form of rebirth. Jade cicadas were placed in the mouths of the dead during burial across the Han dynasty, and pendant and ornamental cicadas were produced throughout the subsequent centuries.

~ Dimensions ~

The piece has a length of 3.4 inches (8.7 cm), a width of 0.8 inches (2.2 cm) & a height of 1.5 inches (3.8 cm).

It weighs 130g

~ Condition ~

The piece is in great condition with no cracks or chips.

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