A SMALL FINELY-ENGRAVED GILT-BRONZE STEM CUP
A SMALL FINELY-ENGRAVED GILT-BRONZE STEM CUP
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A SMALL FINELY-ENGRAVED GILT-BRONZE STEM CUP

TANG DYNASTY (AD 618-907)

Details
A SMALL FINELY-ENGRAVED GILT-BRONZE STEM CUP
TANG DYNASTY (AD 618-907)
The deep sides of the cup are engraved with meticulous details with a wide band of leafy flower scroll reserved on a ring-punched ground between narrow bands of similar decoration above and below, and repeated on the spreading foot, and is covered overall in thick, well-preserved gilding.
2 ½ in. (6.3 cm.) high, Japanese wood box
Provenance
Acquired in Japan, 1997.

Lot Essay

This superbly engraved stem cup exemplifies the refinement of Tang dynasty metalwork. A cup of this form decorated with scrolling vines and grape leaves was unearthed from the reliquary chamber of the pagoda at the Qingshan Temple in Lindongxian, Shaanxi province. The construction of the temple was begun in 736, and in 740 the reliquary was placed in the subterranean chamber of the pagoda along with other objects of gold, silver, bronze and ceramic.

Other cups of this shape with varying foliate scroll decoration are in private and public collections, including one illustrated by B. Gyllensvard, Chinese Gold & Silver in the Carl Kempe Collection, Stockholm, 1953, no. 102; one illustrated in Ancient Chinese Arts in the Idemitsu Collection, Tokyo, 1989, no. 320; one in the collection of Senator Hugh Scott, illustrated in the Golden Age of Chinese Art, 1970, no. 18; one in the collection of Ostasiatische Kunstabteilung, Berlin, included in the Exhibition of Chinese Art, Berlin, 12 January - 2 April 1929, no. 438; and another from the Erwin Harris Collection, sold at Christie’s New York, 16 March 2017, lot 876 (part).

A copy of the Technical Examination Report is available upon request.

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