Pair of Earrings
6th century C.E.
Korean
Asian Art
Royal tombs near the Silla capital city, Gyeongju, in southeast Korea, have yielded sophisticated gold adornments including crowns and earrings. Elaborate pendants like these were either worn as earrings or suspended from the sides of royal crowns to mimic earrings. Granulation, or decoration with small individual gold beads, is applied to the sheathing of the earrings’ upper segment and used to outline the individual leaf shape of the gold spangles and lower leaves. The technique is thought to have developed in Mesopotamia around the eighteenth century B.C.E. and then spread to the Persian, Greek, and Roman empires, eventually traveling across the great Central Asia trade routes to China and the rest of East Asia. Its diffusion demonstrates the importance of Silk Road trade to East Asian material culture.
- Maker/Artist
- Korean
- Classification
- Jewelry
- Formatted Medium
- Gold, probably over a lacquer core
- Locations
- Place made: Korea
- Dimensions
- Length of each earring: 3 9/16 in. (9 cm)
- Departments
- Asian Art
- Accession Number
- 2013.3a-b
- Credit Line
- Gift of Theodora Wilbour and Jane Van Vleck, by exchange and Designated Purchase Fund
- Exhibitions
- Arts of Korea
- Rights Statement
- Creative Commons-BY
- Museum Location
- Asian Galleries, South, 2nd floor
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