A BRONZE DAGGER AXE, GE
A BRONZE DAGGER AXE, GE
1 More
Early Chinese Bronzes from the Shouyang Studio
A BRONZE DAGGER AXE, GE

LATE SPRING AND AUTUMN PERIOD, FIRST HALF OF THE 6TH CENTURY-476 BC

Details
A BRONZE DAGGER AXE, GE
LATE SPRING AND AUTUMN PERIOD, FIRST HALF OF THE 6TH CENTURY-476 BC
5 ¼ in. (13.2 cm.) long, cloth box
Provenance
Acquired in Hong Kong, circa 1989.
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. 154-5, no. 57.
Ancient Chinese Bronzes from the Shouyang Studio: The Katherine and George Fan Collection, Ningbo, p. 35.
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. 57.

Brought to you by

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

Check the condition report or get in touch for additional information about this

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

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

This finely cast ge features a bird with raised head, large round eyes, hook beak, scaly neck, bifurcated tail, and claws clutching a struggling snake. The bird surmounts a short triangular blade with rounded, sharp edges and an oval receptacle with two holes to fix it onto a wood shaft, remnants of which remain in the opening.

A bronze ge of similar shape and design was unearthed from a late Spring and Autumn burial at Zhongzhou Road, Luoyang (see Wang Ju, ‘Eastern Zhou Tombs at Zhongzhou Middle Road, Luoyang’, Wenwu, 1995.8, p. 11), while a clay mold for casting a ge decorated with a similarly rendered bird, from the site of the foundry at Houma, southern Shanxi province, is illustrated in Shanxisheng Kaogu Yanjiusuo ed., Houma Bronze Casting Site, vol. 1, 1993, p. 95. Other comparable examples include a ge and a zun wine vessel from Jinshengcun, Taiyuan (see Shanxisheng Kaogu Yanjiusuo and Taiyuanshi Wenwu Guanliweiyuanhui ed., Tombs of the Jin State Zhao Ministers at Taiyuan, pp. 90 and 108), as well as clay molds from Houma with the addition of snakes similar to that of the current dagger axe (see Shanxisheng Kaogu Yanjiusuo ed., Houma Bronze Casting Site, vol. I, 1993, p. 240, pl. 131.4).

More from Important Chinese Art

View All
View All