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IMPORTANT CHINESE ART INCLUDING THE COLLECTION OF DOROTHY TAPPER GOLDMAN                     重要中४藝術暨高曼珍藏



          The Property of a Gentleman
          1139
          A RARE SET OF BRONZE RITUAL CLEANSING               The pan and yi were used in conjunction to form a set of vessels for
          VESSELS, YI AND PAN                                 the ritual washing of hands. Such vessels would have been included
          LATE WESTERN ZHOU DYNASTY, 8TH CENTURY BC           in the ritual vessel sets "required by an individual or family of a given
                                                              period to perform the customary ritual food and wine offerings to
          Yi: 9º in. (23.3 cm.) long                          the ancestors." See J. Rawson, Western Zhou Ritual Bronzes from
          Pan: 11¿ in. (28.2 cm.) wide across handles         the Arthur M. Sackler Collections, vol. IIA, Washington, DC and
          $20,000-30,000                                      Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1990, p. 98. Such a set, of middle Western
                                                              Zhou date, from Shaanxi Fufeng Qijiacun M19, is illustrated in a line
          PROVENANCE:                                         drawing, ibid., p. 99, fig. 142d.
          Acquired in Hong Kong in the early 1990s.
                                                              Not only is it very rare to find a set of these vessels still together, but
          ૈ♥珍藏                                                also to find a set with this unusual simple decoration of horizontal
          西周晚期   Ռ元עՋˠ紀   青銅匜及青銅盤ˏ組                           grooves. For the more typical three-legged yi, see J. So, Eastern Zhou
                                                              Ritual Bronzes from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections, New York, 1995,
          Ϝ源
          1990年代׀Ն藏於香港                                        p. 340, no. 68, for an example dated to the early Spring and Autumn
                                                              period, 8th century BC, which has a band of S-shaped dragons below
                                                              the rim and a more prominant dragon-headed handle. Also illustrated,
                                                              pp. 342-3, figs. 68.1 and 68.3, are two further three-legged yi, one in the
                                                              Honolulu Academy of Arts and one in the Sen'oku Hakkokan, Kyoto,
                                                              which feature bands of stylized dragon scroll below the rim.





















 The Property of a Gentleman
 1138
 A BRONZE RITUAL POURING VESSEL, YI
 SPRING AND AUTUMN PERIOD, LATE 6TH CENTURY-EARLY 5TH
 CENTURY BC
 7 in. (17.9 cm.) long
 $6,000-8,000
 PROVENANCE:
 Acquired in Hong Kong in the early 1990s.


 A similar tubular spout with animal mask decoration, and a similar low,
 rounded foot with rope-twist band can be seen on a yi of larger size
 (25 cm. long) from Shanxi Hunyuan Liyu, which is now in the Musée
 Guimet, and illustrated by J. So in Eastern Zhou Ritual Bronzes from the
 Arthur M. Sackler Collections, Washington, D. C., 1995, p. 331, fig. 65.2.
 See, also, the yi of larger size (27 cm. long) with a more elaborate, high-
 relief mask on the spout, as well as on the handle, from Xiasi Temple,
 Xichuan, Henan province, and now in the Henan Provincial Museum,
 illustrated in Zhongguo qingtongqi quanji (Complete Collection of
 Chinese Bronzes), vol. 10: Eastern Zhou 4, Beijing, 1998, no. 71.
 ૈ♥珍藏
 春秋時期   Ռ元עՍˠ紀末 ̩ˠ紀׀   青銅匜
 Ϝ源
 1990年代׀Ն藏於香港  (detail)
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