A FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL, GU
A FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL, GU
A FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL, GU
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A FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL, GU
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The Property of a Gentleman
A FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL, GU

LATE SHANG DYNASTY, 12TH – 11TH CENTURY BC

Details
A FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL, GU
LATE SHANG DYNASTY, 12TH – 11TH CENTURY BC
The inner foot is cast with an inscription reading Yali (a clan sign) followed by shi X X.
12 ½ in. (31.8 cm.) high, zitan box, hardwood stand
Provenance
Yamanaka & Co., Ltd.
Collection of Mrs. Christian R. Holmes (1871-1941).
Sotheby Parke-Bernet, New York, 14-15 November 1963, lot 258.
Mayuyama & Co., Ltd, Tokyo.
Hirano Kotoken, Tokyo.
Monochrome II; Sotheby’s Hong Kong, 9 October 2020, lot 58.
Literature
Umehara Sueji, Shina Kodo Seika/Selected Relics of Ancient Chinese Bronzes from Collections in Europe and America, vol. 1, Osaka, 1933, cat. no. 53.
Wang Chen, Xu Yinwencun (Continuation of the Surviving Writings from the Yin Dynasty), Beijing, 1935, vol. 2, p. 45.9.
Selected Ancient Chinese Bronzes from the Collection of Mrs. Christian R. Holmes, n.d.
Chen Mengjia, Institute of Archaeology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (ed.), Mei diguo zhuyi jielue de wo guo Yin Zhou tongqi jilu, Beijing, 1962, no. R139.
Noel Barnard and Cheung Kwong-Yue, Rubbings and Hand Copies of Bronze Inscriptions in Chinese, Japanese, European, American, and Australasian Collections, Taipei, 1978, vol. 7, no. 1080.

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Rufus Chen (陳嘉安)
Rufus Chen (陳嘉安) Head of Sale, AVP, Specialist

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Lot Essay

Gu, ritual vessels used for wine, are one of the most recognizable bronze forms from the Shang dynasty. First seen as slender beakers during the Erlitou period, circa 2000 to 1500 BC, these vessels eventually evolved into the elegant, trumpet-mouthed form of the late Anyang period, 12th-11th century BC. Gu were among the most important vessels used in Shang ritual practices, as evidenced by the inclusion of fifty-three such vessels in the tomb of Fu Hao.

The present gu is comparable in shape and decoration, both in motifs and arrangement, to those found at the Shang capital site near Anyang in Henan province, and to others in both museum and private collections. A similarly decorated gu is illustrated by Robert W. Bagley in Shang Ritual Bronzes in the Arthur M. Sackler Collection, Washington, D.C., 1987, p. 255, no. 38. Another comparable example was sold in Shang: Early Chinese Ritual Bronzes from the Daniel Shapiro Collection; Christie’s New York, 18 March 2021, lot 501. Only a handful of bronze vessels with the Yali clan signs have been recorded. A bronze jia dated to the late Shang dynasty and bearing a related Yali clan sign underneath its handle is in the collection of Tianjin Museum and illustrated in Tianjin bowuguan cang qingtong qi (Bronze Wares Collected by Tianjin Museum), Beijing, 2018, no. 18.

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