A RARE FROG-FORM WATER POT AND DROPPER
A RARE FROG-FORM WATER POT AND DROPPER

EASTERN HAN DYNASTY (AD 25-220)

Details
A RARE FROG-FORM WATER POT AND DROPPER
EASTERN HAN DYNASTY (AD 25-220)
The water pot is unusually made in the form of a frog standing on four slender legs, with a leaf-shaped cup positioned below the mouth, a pair of tubes positioned behind the front legs, and a tube in the center of the back into which fits the water dropper which has a quadrilobed rim. The head is detailed with nostrils and prominent eyes enhanced by fine linear markings.
5 in. (12.7 cm.) long
Provenance
Acquired in New York, 1990.

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

Water pots were an essential component on a scholar's desk and were fashioned in a wide variety of forms, including fruit, fish and other animals, such as this very unusual and whimsical frog-form example. Other bronze animal-form water pots include two Six Dynasties examples in the Palace Museum, Beijing, illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum - Bronze Articles for Daily Use, Hong Kong, 2006, p. 159, no. 137, in the form of a mythical horned beast, and p. 160, no. 138, in the form of a tortoise. Like the present water pot, the Palace mythical beast-form water pot retains its original tubular water dropper. Both Palace water pots, like the current example, also have a small cup positioned below the mouth to hold the water that flows from the hollow body.

More from Important Chinese Archaic Bronzes from a Distinguished Private Collection

View All
View All