A VERY RARE AND LARGE BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL AND COVER, HU
A VERY RARE AND LARGE BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL AND COVER, HU
A VERY RARE AND LARGE BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL AND COVER, HU
2 更多
A VERY RARE AND LARGE BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL AND COVER, HU
5 更多
士紳珍藏
西周早期 公元前十一至十世紀 青銅蓋壺

銘文: 作寶壺

細節
西周早期 公元前十一至十世紀 青銅蓋壺銘文: 作寶壺18 ¼ in. (46.3 cm.) high
來源
草雅居古美術, 香港, 1991年3月12日

榮譽呈獻

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

拍品專文


A bronze hu and cover of this rare and distinctive form, but with a completely undecorated, plain surface and of smaller size (41.1. cm.), is illustrated by J. F. So and E. C. Bunker in Traders and Raiders on China's Northern Frontier, Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC, 1995, p. 42, col. pl. 6, and p. 105, no. 19, where it is dated late 11th-early 10th century BC and attributed to north or northwest China. In her discussion of the vessel on p. 105, So notes that when the lid is inverted it can serve as a goblet on a low flared foot, and states, “When the two holes on the stem of the lid are aligned with the holes on the undecorated tubular handles at the base of the neck and the two holes on the flared foot ring, rope or leather strapping can pass through them and secure the container for travel.” So also notes that portable containers of this type are “forerunners of the variety of later vessels encased in imitation rope cages,” such as those illustrated ibid., pp. 106-7, nos. 20 and 21, and “reflect China’s increased traffic with non-Chinese patrons and its fascination with the exotic foreign ways of life of the northern tribes.” Another undecorated bronze hu and cover of this type, also of smaller size (38.2 cm.), is illustrated by J. Rawson in The Bella and P. P. Chiu Collection of Ancient Chinese Bronzes, Hong Kong, 1988, pp. 76-7, no. 27.

A comparable bronze hu and cover, but of smaller size (42.9 cm.) and decorated with an allover zigzag design of narrow leiwen bands, in the Hakutsuru Bijutsukan, Kobe, is illustrated by J. Rawson in Western Zhou Ritual Bronzes from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections, vol. IIB, Cambridge, 1990, p. 274, fig. 15.4, where it is dated early to middle Western Zhou. Another comparable bronze hu with allover zigzag design of leiwen bands, but lacking its cover, from the collection of Stephen Junkunc, III, was sold in Important Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art from an American Private Collection, Christie’s New York, 21 September 1995, lot 296. See, also, the bronze you and cover dated first half of middle Western Zhou, of similar form and comparable large size (45 cm.), but with a swing handle with animal-head terminals, from the tomb of Feng Ji, Shaanxi Fufeng Liujiacun, illustrated by Rawson, op. cit., p. 481, fig. 64.5.

A line drawing of a hu of this type with a similar band of birds around the neck, but lacking a cover, is illustrated in the Xiqing gujian, a 40-volume illustrated catalogue of ancient bronzes commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor. (Fig. 1) Compiled between 1749 and 1755, it includes some 1,529 bronze objects from the imperial collection.

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