Page 80 - Sotheby's NYC September 20 2022 Forging An Empire Bronzes
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ast with pictograms reading Ju Fu Xin, this bronze pan of the early Western Zhou dynasty                   In the late Shang dynasty, Ju was a powerful clan residing mostly in Henan and Shandong provinces.
                                  (c. 1046-771 BC) has an elegant, smoothly curved profile. The two characters Fu Xin                        Members of the clan held important official positions under the Shang king. One such official was Xiaozi
                      Cindicate that the vessel belonged to Father Xin, while Ju would be his clan. Shallow basins,                          X, the owner of a bronze gui, sold in these rooms, 17th March 2021, lot 193. The inscription of the gui
                       pan, were used for holding water in ritual ceremonies, probably used together with water ewers, he, as                documents the famous historical event of the military campaign against Yifang launched by Di Xin, the
                       a set. They appear to have formed an integral part of ritual vessel groups. See, for example, an early                last king of the Shang empire. Xiaozi X was one of the military generals who directly participated in this
                       Western Zhou group found in a tomb at Gaojiabu, Jingyang county, Shaanxi province, comprising in                      campaign. The Ju clan was active until at least the middle Western Zhou dynasty, and members of the
                       addition to pan, vessels such as he, gui, and zun. They are illustrated in a line drawing in Jessica Rawson,          clan continued to serve at the Zhou court. According to archeological findings, the residing regions of
                       Western Zhou Ritual Bronzes from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections, vol. IIA, Washington D.C., 1990, p.               the Ju clan in the Western Zhou period was concentrated at Liulihe 琉璃河 near Beijing, which is likely a
                       98, fig. 142b, where the author suggests that the pan in the group might have served as the basin for the             consequence of the relocation policy for the Shang aristocrats introduced by the early Zhou rulers (see
                       similarly ornamented he.                                                                                              He Jingcheng, Shangzhou qingtongqi zushi mingwen yanjiu [Study of the clan pictograms on the bronzes
                                                                                                                                             from the Shang and Zhou dynasties], Jinan, 2009, pp 90-99).
                       A pan closely related to the present piece, the Tian Min Fu Yi Pan 天黽父乙盤, in the San Diego Museum of
                       Art, San Diego (accession no. 1968.101), formerly in the collection of Mrs Irving T. Snyder, included in the          A few bronzes of different forms inscribed with the same name as the present piece are recorded.
                       museum’s exhibition Art of East Asia, San Diego, 2013, is illustrated in Rawson, op.cit., vol. IIB, p. 719, fig.      Compare the lid of the Ju Fu Xin You 舉父辛卣 in the Palace Museum, Beijing, cast with patterns closely
                       121.2. Another similar vessel, the Tai Bao Du Pan 大保都盤, lacking the high-relief masks, formerly in the                related to this pan, but lacking the high-relief animal masks, included in Yan Yiping, Jinwen Zongji /
                       Wessen Collection, now in the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, Stockholm, is also illustrated in Rawson,            Corpus of Bronze Inscriptions, Taipei, 1983, no. 5171.
                       op.cit., vol. IIB, p. 718, fig. 121.1. Compare also a bronze basin with more rounded sides, the body similarly
                       cast with animal masks in high relief between narrow borders of rings, but decorated with cicada blades
                       instead of confronting kui dragons, sold in our London rooms, 10th November 2010, lot 210.







                 78  POWER / CONQUEST: THE FORGING OF EMPIRES
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