A RARE YUE BIRD-FORM CUP
A RARE YUE BIRD-FORM CUP
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THE PROPERTY OF A LADY
A RARE YUE BIRD-FORM CUP

FIVE DYNASTIES (907-960)

Details
A RARE YUE BIRD-FORM CUP
FIVE DYNASTIES (907-960)
The cup of deep rounded form is raised on a spreading foot. One side is potted with a bird standing upright detailed with round bulging eyes, a sharp beak and outstretched wings. The square-cut tail is detailed with incised lines indicating its plummage, and forms part of the handle on the opposite side. It is covered overall with an olive-green glaze with the exception of the base, revealing the reddish-brown body.
6 in. (15 cm.) long, box
Provenance
An English private collection, acquired in Hong Kong in the 1980s

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Priscilla Kong
Priscilla Kong

Lot Essay

Bird-form vessels were used as ladles for wine for ritual purposes during the Warring States. The Yue kilns revived this form in the Five Dynasties period. Compare to a nearly identical bird-form cup also dated to the Five Dynasties in the collection of the Palace Museum, Beijing, illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum, Porcelain of the Jin and Tang Dynasties, Hong Kong, 1996, p. 256, no. 234, (fig. 1).

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