AN ARCHAIC BRONZE RITUAL TRIPOD FOOD VESSEL, DING
AN ARCHAIC BRONZE RITUAL TRIPOD FOOD VESSEL, DING
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THE ROBERT B. AND BEATRICE C. MAYER FAMILY COLLECTION
AN ARCHAIC BRONZE RITUAL TRIPOD FOOD VESSEL, DING

EARLY WESTERN ZHOU DYNASTY, 11TH-10TH CENTURY BC

Details
AN ARCHAIC BRONZE RITUAL TRIPOD FOOD VESSEL, DING
EARLY WESTERN ZHOU DYNASTY, 11TH-10TH CENTURY BC
The deep bowl is raised on three legs issuing from taotie masks and is cast in relief with a band of taotie masks below with a pair of inverted U-shaped handles that rise from the rim. The interior is cast with a two-character inscription, Zu Ding (Ancestor Ding).
9 ¼ in. (23.5 cm.) high
Provenance
Lantin and Farhadi, New York, 1958.

Lot Essay

A ding of smaller size (21.5 cm. high), also dated to the early Western Zhou dynasty and with similar taotie masks bisected with knife-like flanges on the legs, is illustrated by Jessica Rawson in Western Zhou Ritual Bronzes from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections, vol. IIB, Cambridge, 1990, p. 250, no. 9. The Sackler ding has a deeper body than the present ding, and the legs are taller and thinner. The taotie masks in the band encircling the body are also more consolidated and have C-shaped horns on the Sackler ding, while the taotie masks on the current vessel are dismembered and have pointed, projecting horns. Rawson illustrates, op. cit., pp. 252-3, four additional related early Western Zhou bronze ding from Shaanxi Baoji Zhuyuangou, two of which have bands of dismembered taotie masks similar to those seen on the present vessel.

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