A BRONZE RITUAL TRIPOD WINE VESSEL, JIA
A BRONZE RITUAL TRIPOD WINE VESSEL, JIA
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PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT PRIVATE ASIAN COLLECTION
商中期 青銅饕餮紋斝

MID-SHANG DYNASTY, 13TH CENTURY BC

細節
商中期 青銅饕餮紋斝
12 in. (30.5 cm.) high
來源
Acquired in Hong Kong, 1991.

榮譽呈獻

Olivia Hamilton
Olivia Hamilton

拍品專文


Jia of this type, with the decoration arranged in two registers, appeared shortly before the Anyang period (c. 1300-1030 BC). The main decoration was usually that of taotie masks, either cast in relief or flat-cast as on the present jia, and on the very similar jia of comparable height (35.2 cm.), illustrated in Shang Ritual Bronzes in the National Palace Museum Collection, Taipei, 1998, pp. 152-7, no. 9, which is dated early Anyang period (13th century BC). As with the present jia, the taotie masks on the National Palace example are formed by birds with quills, hooked beaks and rounded eyes confronted on a narrow flange. Also illustrated, p. 156, are two jia excavated in 1968 at Xiao chuan, Anyang prefecture, Henan province, the first from Tomb M388, the other from Tomb 331. Both of these have flat-cast decoration, similar posts and simple strap handles. Another similar jia, also flat-cast with birds with quills forming the taotie masks, in the Röhss Museum, is illustrated by Bernhard Karlgren in "Some Characteristics of the Yin Art," BMFEA, No. 34, 1962, pl. 31a. See, also, another jia of this type, also with flat-cast taotie bands, and similar strap handle and posts, sold at Christie's New York, 19 March 2008, lot 487.

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