8563

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    Tibetan Woman’s Ga’u Box with Silver, Gilt & Coral

    Central Tibet, probably Lhasa
    19th century

    width: 7.7cm, height: 9.1cm, depth: 5.8cm, weight: 114g

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    Provenance

    private collection, Canada

    This fine ga’u box is of a type known as a khedi in Lhasa and would have been worn by a Tibetan woman. It is a larger example than is usual.

    It comprises two halves that fit together: a silver front and a copper back.

    Of oval form with rounded contours, it has a hammered silver front that has been chased in high relief with Himalayan scrollwork around a good-sized central coral cabochon in a high, gilded box setting. The front is further embellished with a beautiful section of heavy gilding.

    The lower edge of the box is decorated with a stylised thunderbolt emblem. The top has a long silver tube through which a cord would have been threaded to allow the ga’u to be suspended from the neck.

    The back comprises hammered copper sheet.

    Ga’us functioned as talismanic or protective devices and would enclose items such as mantras written on small scraps of paper and other such things that would help protect the wearer from all manner of ills and dangers.

    This box is in fine condition.

    References

    Clarke, J., Jewellery of Tibet and the Himalayas, V&A Publications, 2004.

    Ghose, M. (ed.), Vanishing Beauty: Asian Jewelry and Ritual Objects from the Barbara and David Kipper Collection, Art Institute of Chicago, 2016.

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