{"id":60728,"title":"Celestial Horse","medium":"Bronze with traces of polychrome","classification":"Sculpture","dimension":"44 7/8 x 34 1/2 x 14 1/2 in. (113.98 x 87.63 x 36.83 cm) (without mount)","object_name":"Sculpture","continent":"Asia","country":"China","nationality":"Chinese","dated":"25–220","room":"G333","list":"chinese-art-highlights","role":"Artist","text":"Chinese government envoys sent to central Asia returned to court marveling over a breed of “heavenly horse” like no other, a stout animal with a powerful back and shoulders that worked so hard it sweated blood. The Chinese Emperor Wu (r. 141–87 bce) became obsessed with these stories and dispatched diplomats and later a military force to obtain the horses. His interest in these remarkable horses and the growing role horses played in military campaigns largely account for the popularity of the horse in art from the Han dynasty, particularly the time of Wu’s reign. Bronze horses such as this one were placed in elaborately furnished aristocratic tombs and were meant to provide transportation for the deceased in the afterlife. This spirited horse, a blend of ideal and real, captures the spirit of the fabled “celestial horses” of the Han dynasty.","creditline":"Gift of Ruth and Bruce Dayton","accession_number":"2002.45","artist":"China","department":"Asian Art","rights_type":"Public Domain","image_width":4080,"image_height":4076,"recent":0,"see_also":[],"sort_number":"2002    45","dynasty":"Eastern Han dynasty (25–220 CE)","image":"valid","public_access":1,"curator_approved":0,"highlights":0,"Cache_Location":"060000\\700\\20\\60728","Primary_RenditionNumber":"20020201_mia341_2280.jpg","Rights_Image_Display":"Full","list:chinese-art-highlights":true,"related:audio-stops":[{"title":"Celestial Horse (2 labels)","_id":"60728","objectId":"60728","link":"http://audio-tours.s3.amazonaws.com/p172.mp3","number":"172","type":"audio"}],"related:artstories":[{"title":"Celestial Horse","_id":"60728","objectId":"60728","description":"<p>It’s a blend of real and ideal, the perfect mount for getting around in the afterlife. The bronze beauty captures the spirit of the horses imported by the Chinese elite from the West during the Han Dynasty. Nicknamed celestial or heavenly horses, they were prized for their size and strength at a time when the Chinese had only a small, pony-like breed. Aristocratic families would have bronze horses like this one cast and placed in elaborately furnished tombs for the deceased to use in the world beyond.</p>","link":"http://artstories.artsmia.org/#/o/60728","type":"artstory"}],"mtime":"2026-02-27T06:00:50.717Z"}