Page 178 - Deydier VOL.2 Meiyintang Collection of Chinese Bronses
P. 178

191.   Archaic bronze wine or water vessel hu
                      Western Zhou dynasty, circa 11  - 8  centuries bc.
                                                         th
                                                              th
                      西周時期青銅壺
                      Height: 42.2 cm

                      A bronze vessel with an elongated,  pear-shaped  body,   Provenance:
                      which, according to ancient inscriptions and classical     ▪ Paulette Goddard Remarque Collection.
                      texts,  was  used  for holding  either  fermented  beverages     ▪ J.T. Tai Collection, New York, U.S.A.
                      or water. The body  of  the  elegantly  shaped  vessel  is     ▪ Galerie Christian Deydier, Paris, France.
                      supported on a wide splayed foot and has a lug handle on
                      both its left and right upper sides.  The vessel’s dome-like   Similar examples:
                      cover is surmounted by a high, wide, tower-like hollow     ▪ Similar vessels  either  undecorated  or covered  with
                      knob that turns outwards as it rises towards its thick rim.  very elaborate design are illustrated in Hayashi M., In
                                                                           Shu Jidai Seidoki no Kenkyu (In Shu Seidoki Soran
                      The undecorated  vessel has a light green patina with   Ichi),  Conspectus  of Yin  and Zhou Bronzes,  Tokyo
                      malachite and cuprite incrustations.                 1984, Vol. I - Plates, p. 301 - 305.
                                                                           ▪ A similar hu, but with a small band of design on the
                                                                           neck and on the  cover,  from the  Avery Brundage
                                                                           Collection of San Francisco, is published by Lefebvre
                                                                           d’ Argencé R.Y., Bronze Vessels of Ancient China in The
                                                                           Avery Brundage Collection,  the Asian Art Museum,
                                                                           San Francisco 1977,  p. 95.
                                                                           ▪ Another hu, but with an exceptionally fine decoration
                                                                           all over  and now in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston,
                                                                           is published  in Hayashi M., In Shu Jidai  Seidoki  no
                                                                           Kenkyu (In Shu Seidoki Soran Ichi), Conspectus of Yin
                                                                           and Zhou Bronzes, Tokyo 1984, Vol. I - Plates, p. 301,
                                                                           no. 57.




























































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