Skip to main content
Collections Menu
SAM'S collection
Tomb guardian
Tomb guardian

Tomb guardian

Date6th - 9th century
Label TextThe Chinese were fascinated with the appearance of foreigners and often represented them as caricatures with exaggerated characteristics: large noses, heavy eyebrows, and facial hair. Foreigners were stereotypically perceived as brutes possessing superior physical strength and lacking the sophistication and culture of the Chinese—fierce, strange, and sometimes humorous.
Object number35.3.1
Exhibition HistorySeattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, The Museum: Mixed Metaphors, Fred Wilson, Jan. 28 - June 13, 1993. Seattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, Timeless Grandeur: Art from China, Apr. 25, 2002 - June 12, 2005. Seattle, Washington, Seattle Asian Art Museum, Chinese Art: A Seattle Perspective, Dec. 22, 2007 - July 26, 2009. Seattle, Washington, Seattle Asian Art Museum, Boundless: Stories of Asian Art, Feb. 8, 2020 - ongoing.Published ReferencesHandbook, Seattle Art Museum: Selected Works from the Permanent Collections, Seattle, WA: Seattle Art Museum, 1951, p. 56 (b&w)
Credit LineEugene Fuller Memorial Collection
Dimensions37 1/2 x 12 x 8 in. (95.25 x 30.48 x 20.32 cm) Overall h.: 41 1/4 in.
MediumEarthenware with paint
Tomb guardian
Chinese
late 7th century
Object number: 35.6
Tomb guardian of Lokapala
Chinese
8th - 9th century
Object number: 43.5
Tomb guardian
Chinese
6th - 9th century
Object number: 35.3.2
Photo: Paul Macapia
Chinese
late 7th to first half of the 8th century
Object number: 46.153
Chinese
8th century
Object number: 2010.37.5
Photo: Paul Macapia
Chinese
8th century
Object number: 43.101
Chinese
386-534
Object number: 97.91.1
Photo: iocolor, LLP
Chinese
early 6th century
Object number: 65.151
Tomb sculpture:  woman on horseback
Chinese
7th-8th century
Object number: 67.18
Horse
Chinese
7th-8th century
Object number: 37.2
Tomb tile
Chinese
206 B.C.-220 A.D.
Object number: 39.2