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Figure of a Squatting Drummer
Title:Figure of a Squatting Drummer
Date:Eastern Han dynasty
Medium:Earthenware
Dimensions:23 3/4 x 17 x 15 3/4 in. (60.33 x 43.18 x 40.01 cm)
Creation Place:China
Credit Line:Gift of funds from the Regis Foundation
Accession Number:2003.101
Location:G215
Comical caricatures of performers were especially popular in Szechwan Province during the Eastern Han dynasty (A.D. 25-220). Used as tomb figurines, they provided entertainment in the afterlife, and an entire troupe might be interred with the deceased. Drummers like the one represented here specialized in a kind of storytelling that was part spoken, part sung. This one sings merrily, his brow wrinkled in laughter. His heavy body suggests he may be a dwarf. Performers of similar build appear on Han tomb tiles decorated with scenes of juggling and sword balancing.

Although ceramic Han tomb figures were mass-produced, this type is surely one of the most engaging and expressive examples of Han dynasty figural art.