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               29 – archaic bronze wine vessel zhi
               SHANG DYNASTY, ANYANG / YINXU PERIOD
               CIRCA 14  – 12  / 11  CENTURIES B. C.
                         TH
                     TH
                             TH
               H.: 11.5 CM  L.: 11.7 CM
               Ritual bronze vessel used for dinking fermented beverages. The   PUBLISHED
               bulging round body with a flared neck is supported on a ring foot
               and decorated on each side with a large owl.      –  Deydier Ch., Les Bronzes Archaïques Chinois, Archaic Chinese
               Each of the four sections of the vessel is decorated with one part of   Bronzes – 1 – Xia & Shang – Paris 1995, p. 122.
               the bird: the vessel’s foot is cast with the legs of the bird, the lower
               section of the body with its wings, the upper part with the crea-  SIMILAR EXAMPLES
               ture’s round eyes, beak and ears and the vessel’s neck with its horns
               or large ears. All are cast in high relief on a leiwen background.  –  A very similar vessel zhi with a cover, from the Asian Art Museum
               The vessel has a dark patina.                       of San Francisco, The Avery Brundage Collection, is illustrated by
                                                                   Deydier Ch., Les Bronzes Archaïques Chinois – Archaic Chinese
               INSCRIPTION                                         Bronzes – 1 – Xia – Shang, Paris 1995, p. 270.
                                                                 –  Another zhi also with a cover, is published in Zhongguo qing-
               –  A two-character inscription inside the vessel reads “Fu Ding”,   tongqi quanji – 2 – Shang, Beijing 1997, p. 143, no. 193.
                “Father Ding”.
                                                                 NOTE
               PROVENANCE
                                                                 –  According to early Chinese chronicles, the people of the Shang
               –  Alan & Simone Hartman Collection, New York, USA.  worshipped a mystical bird called a chixiao or owl which they
               –  Deydier Ch. / Oriental Bronzes Ltd, London, UK.  believed was endowed with extraordinary mystical powers and
               – Count & Countess Paul Lippens Collection, Brussels, Belgium, 1999.  served as a medium between the world of the living and the
                                                                   world of the dead.










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