Asian art dating back to the 11th century BCE at the Hermitage Museum and Gardens in Norfolk, Virginia

Asian art dating back to the 11th century BCE at the Hermitage Museum and Gardens in Norfolk, Virginia.
The Hermitage Museum and Gardens consists of an early 20th century historic house with a world-wide art collection surrounded by twelve acres of formal gardens with natural woodlands and wetlands as well as a Visual Arts Studio. The 42-room house was built by William and Florence Sloane, wealthy New Yorkers who came to the Norfolk area in 1893 to operate textile mills. The museum's Asian collection began with a Japanese Satsuma bowl gifted to Florence Sloane by her sister, Grace Stiles, in 1901. The collection has grown to include Chinese Neolithic jade and archaic ceremonial bronze vessels from the Western Zhou dynasty (11th century – 771 BCE), Chinese snuff bottles, Imperial jade, cloisonné and lacquer, as well as a significant holding of Tang dynasty (618-906 CE) terracotta.


Image: Japanese tortoise shell dish courtesy of the Hermitage Museum and Gardens.

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