拍品专文
The inscription may be read as a dedication to X Fu Gui.
This vessel is very similar to another gui in the Sackler Collections, also illustrated and discussed by Jessica Rawson, Western Zhou Ritual Bronzes from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections, 1990, pp. 414-45, no. 51. The author refers to these gui as one of the more common type during the early Western Zhou and goes on to list five other provenanced examples, p. 415. A variation on the decoration can be seen on another early Western Zhou gui with vertically ribbed, rather than plain body below the dragon band, illustrated in Catalogue to the Special Exhibition of Grain Vessels of the Shang and Chou Dynasties, National Palace Museum, Taipei, 1985, pp. 248-9, pl. 39.
The result of Oxford thermoluminescence test no. 366m78 is consistent with the dating of this lot.
This vessel is very similar to another gui in the Sackler Collections, also illustrated and discussed by Jessica Rawson, Western Zhou Ritual Bronzes from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections, 1990, pp. 414-45, no. 51. The author refers to these gui as one of the more common type during the early Western Zhou and goes on to list five other provenanced examples, p. 415. A variation on the decoration can be seen on another early Western Zhou gui with vertically ribbed, rather than plain body below the dragon band, illustrated in Catalogue to the Special Exhibition of Grain Vessels of the Shang and Chou Dynasties, National Palace Museum, Taipei, 1985, pp. 248-9, pl. 39.
The result of Oxford thermoluminescence test no. 366m78 is consistent with the dating of this lot.