A SMALL BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL, ZHI
A SMALL BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL, ZHI
A SMALL BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL, ZHI
A SMALL BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL, ZHI
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Early Chinese Bronzes from the Shouyang Studio
A SMALL BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL, ZHI

LATE SHANG DYNASTY, 13TH-11TH CENTURY BC

Details
A SMALL BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL, ZHI
LATE SHANG DYNASTY, 13TH-11TH CENTURY BC
The base of the interior is cast with a clan sign followed by two characters reading Fu Yi (Father Yi).
4 3⁄16 in. (10.6 cm.) high
Provenance
Delicate House - Chinese Curios, Hong Kong, 8 July 1992.
The Shouyang Studio, New York.
Literature
Zhou Ya, Ma Jinhong, and Hu Jialin ed., Ancient Chinese Bronzes from the Shouyang Studio: The Katherine and George Fan Collection, Shanghai, 2008, pp. 45-7, no. 12.
Ancient Chinese Bronzes from the Shouyang Studio: The Katherine and George Fan Collection, Ningbo, 2009, p. 8.
Wu Zhenfeng, Shangzhou qingtongqi mingwen ji tuxiang jicheng (Compendium of Inscriptions and Images of Bronzes from the Shang and Zhou Dynasties), vol. 19, Shanghai, 2012, p. 196, no. 10306.
Luo Xinhui, Shouyang Jijin Shuzheng (Textual Research of Inscriptions from Bronze Collection of The Shouyang Studio), Shanghai, 2016, pp. 1-3, no. 1.
Exhibited
Ancient Chinese Bronzes from the Shouyang Studio: The Katherine and George Fan Collection, October 2008 - January 2011: Shanghai, Shanghai Museum; Hong Kong, Art Gallery, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Ningbo, Ningbo Museum; Chicago, Art Institute of Chicago, no. 12.

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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

This rare small zhi is finely cast in relief around the flared rim with a band of taotie masks with inward curved horns. The mid-section is decorated with further renmian (human face) with bulging eyes and protruding noses, and the foot is cast with two groups of dragons. A three-character inscription, comprised of a kneeling figure followed by Fu Yi (Father Yi), is cast on the interior of the base.

A zhi of similar form and with similar decoration, but with an inscription reading Mu Yi (mother Yi) and complete with its cover, was excavated from south of Dasikongcun, Anyang, Henan province, M53, and is illustrated in Zheng Zhenxiang, “1962 nian Anyang Dasikongcun fajue jianbao,” Kaogu, 1964.8. pl. 1.1, and dates to the fourth phase of the Yin Ruins period.

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