Page 207 - Deydier VOL.2 Meiyintang Collection of Chinese Bronses
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200.  Ritual bronze pouring vessel yi
 Eastern Zhou dynasty, Warring States period, circa 5  - 3  centuries bc.
 th
 rd
 東周戰國時期青銅匜
 Length: 24.2 cm

 A pouring vessel yi with a shallow, rounded, rectangular   Provenance:
 body supported by three short legs. The front section of     ▪ J.T. Tai Collection, New York, U.S.A.
 the vessel ends in a spout in the form of the head of a wide-    ▪ Sotheby’s, New York, 22  March, 2011.
 nd
 mouthed roaring beast with large protruding rectangular     ▪ Galerie Christian Deydier, Paris, France.
 eyes, thick eyelashes, a wide pug nose and long, curled
 horns at the back of its head, all in high relief.  Exhibited:
   ▪ Sotheby’s,  New  York, 22  March, 2011,  catalogue
 nd
 Bronze with a light green patina.   no. 187.
   ▪ Bestiaire extraordinaire de la Chine ancienne, Galerie
 Christian Deydier, Paris 2011.

 Published:
   ▪ Sotheby’s,  New  York, 22  March, 2011,  catalogue
 nd
 no. 187.
   ▪ Deydier  Ch.,  Bestiaire  extraordinaire  de  la Chine
 ancienne, Paris 2011.
 Similar example:
   ▪ A very similar yi excavated  in 1923  at Lijialou,
 Xinzheng, Henan, is illustrated by So J., Eastern Zhou
 Ritual Bronzes from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections,
 Vol. III, Washington 1995, p. 346, fig. 69.1.
 Note:
   ▪ According to some scholars,  yi pouring vessels  were
 used to pour water into the basin-like ritual vessel pan.
 According to the Zuo Zhuan,《左傳》or Commentary
 of  Zuo, which  was composed  before  389  bc. and is
 one of China’s earliest works of narrative history, the
 yi was used to pour water to wash celebrants’ hands
 during specific ceremonies.

















































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