A RARE FROG-FORM WATER POT AND DROPPER
A RARE FROG-FORM WATER POT AND DROPPER

EASTERN HAN DYNASTY (AD 25-220)

细节
A RARE FROG-FORM WATER POT AND DROPPER
EASTERN HAN DYNASTY (AD 25-220)
The water pot is unusually made in the form of a frog standing on four slender legs, with a leaf-shaped cup positioned below the mouth, a pair of tubes positioned behind the front legs, and a tube in the center of the back into which fits the water dropper which has a quadrilobed rim. The head is detailed with nostrils and prominent eyes enhanced by fine linear markings.
5 in. (12.7 cm.) long
来源
Acquired in New York, 1990.

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拍品专文

Water pots were an essential component on a scholar's desk and were fashioned in a wide variety of forms, including fruit, fish and other animals, such as this very unusual and whimsical frog-form example. Other bronze animal-form water pots include two Six Dynasties examples in the Palace Museum, Beijing, illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum - Bronze Articles for Daily Use, Hong Kong, 2006, p. 159, no. 137, in the form of a mythical horned beast, and p. 160, no. 138, in the form of a tortoise. Like the present water pot, the Palace mythical beast-form water pot retains its original tubular water dropper. Both Palace water pots, like the current example, also have a small cup positioned below the mouth to hold the water that flows from the hollow body.

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