A VERY FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL FOOD VESSEL, GUI
A VERY FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL FOOD VESSEL, GUI
A VERY FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL FOOD VESSEL, GUI
3 更多
A VERY FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL FOOD VESSEL, GUI
6 更多
PROPERTY FROM A DISTINGUISHED AMERICAN COLLECTION
A VERY FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL FOOD VESSEL, GUI

LATE SHANG DYNASTY, 11TH CENTURY BC

细节
11 1⁄8 in. (28.1 cm.) wide across handles, cloth box
来源
Bella and P. P. Chiu Collection, Hong Kong, by 1988.
Eskenazi, London.
Michael Goedhuis Ltd., London, 1998.
出版
N. Barnard and Cheung Kwong-yue, Rubbings and Hand Copies of Bronze Inscriptions in Chinese, Japanese, European, American and Australasian Collections, Taipei, 1978, Vol. 7, no. 1387.
J. Rawson, The Bella and P.P. Chiu Collection of Ancient Chinese Bronzes, Hong Kong, 1988, p. 62, no. 19.
拍场告示
Please note that this lot has additional provenance than what was printed in the catalogue. The provenance for this lot should read:

Bella and P. P. Chiu Collection, Hong Kong, by 1988.
Eskenazi, London.
Michael Goedhuis Ltd., London, 1998.


請注意,此拍品有額外的來源信息,來源應該為:

趙氏山海樓, 香港, 1988年前
埃斯肯納齊, 倫敦
Michael Goedhuis Ltd., 倫敦, 1998年

荣誉呈献

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

拍品专文


This superbly cast gui with attractive pale greenish-grey patina compares closely with a gui with similar handles and similar decoration of pointed bosses set within a diamond-shaped grid, from the vicinity of the Gan He, Shaanxi Liquan Xian, illustrated in Wenwu ziliao congkan 3, 1980, pp. 28-31, pl. 4:2, and again by J. Rawson in Western Zhou Ritual Bronzes from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections, vol. IIB, The Arthur M. Sackler Foundation, Washington, D.C., 1990, p. 478, fig. 41.1. Also illustrated, p. 378, fig. 41.2, is another similar gui, but with more rounded bosses, which was said to have been found at Anyang. Another comparable gui, formerly in the collection of Chen Jieqi (1813-1884), and said to have been found in Shaanxi Qishan Xian, is illustrated by S. Umehara in Kankaro kikkin-zu, Kyoto, 1947, no. 1.17.

In the entry for the present gui in The Bella and P. P. Chiu Collection of Ancient Chinese Bronzes, Hong Kong, 1988, p. 62, J. Rawson notes, “As with the handles on the present gui, the handles on these Shang vessels often carry rather flat heads. In the early Zhou period, by contrast, comparable gui bore handles crowned by animal heads with horns flattened against the sides, rather than against the tops of the handles…”

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