Page 93 - Deydier UNDERSTANDING CHINESE ARCHAIC BRONZES
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vessel.  This  masterpiece  was  excavated  in  1938  at  Ningxiang  寧
               鄉, Yueshanpu  月山鋪 in Hunan province  湖南 (See illustration
               below).

           2.  By the end of the Yinxu 殷墟 period, the wide-shouldered zun 尊
               is replaced by the high, narrower, cylindrical zun 尊 with its wide
               flaring top and base (See photo on page 90).


               The high cylindrical vessel bulging at its centre and opening out
               as it rises to end in a trumpet-like mouth, is similar to an enlarged
               version of a gu 觚, but is of larger, stockier proportions. Like the
               gu’s 觚, this type of zun’s 尊 foot is also flared.

           3.  A third type of zun 尊 take the form of an animal. Such animal-
               shaped vessels grouped under the heading zun 尊 are known cast
               in the  form of elephants,  buffaloes,  rams,  rhinoceroses, rabbits,
               pigs,  mythological  hybrid  animals, etc.  or birds. Considered  to
               be southern in origin, such animal-shaped vessels appear in the
               repertoire of Chinese bronzes as early as the beginning of the Shang
               商 dynasty, during the Erligang 二里崗 period (circa 17  /16  – 14
                                                                   th
                                                                              th
                                                                        th
               centuries B.C.).
               In general  zun  尊  in the  form of  animals are  spoken  of  as
               niaoshouzun 鳥獸尊 (bird-animal zun 尊), xizun 犠尊 (ox zun 尊),
               xiangzun 象尊 (elephant zun 尊), etc. in Chinese to differentiate
               them from regular zun 尊.
























           Zun, late Shang dynasty or early Western Zhou dynasty (circa 11  century B.C.)
                                                        th
           Height: 31.6 cm – Meiyintang Collection n° 62.
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