Page 125 - Deydier VOL.2 Meiyintang Collection of Chinese Bronses
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176.  Ritual bronze wine or water vessel hu
 Shang dynasty, Yinxu period, circa 13  - 11  centuries bc.
 th
 th
 商代殷墟時期青銅壺
 Height:  30.8 cm

 Archaic bronze wine or water vessel  hu  with a chubby,   Provenance:
 pear-shaped oval body with small lug handles on each of     ▪ Galerie Christian Deydier, Paris, France.
 its upper sides and supported on a high, conical, hollow
 foot. Both sides of the vessel’s body are decorated with two   Similar examples:
 large taotie masks set one above the other and separated     ▪ A very similar hu with protuberant eyebrows now in
 by a narrow, undecorated band. Each taotie mask is cast   the  Brundage  Collection,  the  Asian Art Museum  of
 with bulging round eyes, upwardly curling, sharply tipped   San Francisco, is  illustrated  by Lefebvre  d’Argencé
 ears, long, thick eyebrows, and a protruding pug nose with   R.Y.,  Bronze Vessels  of Ancient  China in the  Avery
 small round double-circle nostrils, all on a background of   Brundage Collection, San Francisco 1977, p. 44 - 45,
 leiwen. The  small  lug  handles  near the  vessel’s  top  are   no. B60 B973.
 decorated  with  incised  taotie masks,  while  the  vessel’s     ▪ Another  hu, in the  British Museum,  is illustrated
 high, conical, hollow foot is decorated with a “monocular”   in  Zhongguo  Qingtongqi Quanji, Vol. 4 -  Shang  4,
 mythical-bird-like pattern.  Beijing 1997, p. 143, no. 147.
 The  vessel  has  an olive-green  patina  with  malachite   Notes:
 incrustations.
   ▪ In Chinese, the term hu refers to vases or jars of a fairly
 large size that come in various shapes, which, despite
 their differences in shape, all share a certain number of
 characteristics, including a bulbous body that recedes
 near its neck, a fairly long neck and a round foot or a
 rectangular foot with rounded corners.  Sometimes hu
 have covers and small lateral handles and rings, which
 is not the  case in the  earliest  Shang  hu,  such as the
 present vessel.
   ▪ The names that  appear  in the  inscriptions on some
 such vessels  differ according to shape, with such
 vessels sometimes being referred to either as hu, ping,
 fu, fang or chung. The most common type of hu from
 the Spring and Autumn period onwards was the bianhu
 or  flattened-egg-shaped-like  vessel  with  cover.    (See
 Wang Tao, Bronzes from the Meiyintang Collection,
 p. 112-113, no. 49.)
   ▪ The exact use of these vessels seems to have varied, with
 the Yili (Book of Rites) mentioning that they were used
 to hold alcoholic beverages, while certain inscriptions
 cast into such bronzes, as well as some classical texts,
 mention that they were used to hold water.
   ▪ First appearing during the Yinxu period of the Shang
 dynasty, hu became very popular from the end of the
 Zhou dynasty, up to and throughout the Han dynasty.





































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