Page 141 - Deydier VOL.2 Meiyintang Collection of Chinese Bronses
P. 141

181.  Ritual bronze food vessel fu
 Shang dynasty, Yinxu period, circa 13  - 11  centuries bc.
 th
 th
 商代殷墟時期青銅簠
 Height: 23.5 cm, Diameter: 31.4 cm

 A very rare  cauldron,  known  as a fu, used  for cooking   Inscription:
 food offerings for  ancestral worship ceremonies. The     ▪ A partial inscription of 10 characters is visible inside
 vessel consists of a deep, round, flat-bottomed bowl with   the body of the vessel. It reads: “X Marquis Xiang used
 a thick, outwardly protruding lip and a pair of loop-like   (X) to make (this) precious ritual vessel; (may) sons
 moveable handles ending in animal-head masks attached   and  grandsons…” 《 X 享伯用作寶尊彝子孫...》.
 to its sides. The upper section of the vessel’s deep-bowl-
 like body is beautifully cast on front and back with a high   Provenance:
 band of stylized silk worms surrounding a central taotie     ▪ Ioka Collection, Japan (reputed to have come from the
 mask with a narrow lower border of leiwen from which   Anyang area, Henan Province, China, around 1940).
 extend long, triangular, leaf-like motifs filled with stylized     ▪ Purchased by Yamanaka in the 1940s.
 cicadas on a leiwen background.    ▪ Galerie Christian Deydier, Paris, France.

 The vessel has a dark patina.  Exhibited:
   ▪ Treasures from Ancient China, Asia Week /New York,
 Galerie  Christian Deydier,  Paris 2009,  catalogue
 p.  6  -  9.
 Published:
   ▪ Deydier  Ch.,  Treasures from Ancient  China,  Asia
 Week / New York, Paris 2009, p. 6 - 9.

 Similar example:
   ▪ The only other recorded  cauldron of this type  is
 published  in Hayashi M., In Shu Jidai  Seidoki  no
 Kenkyu (In Shu Seidoki Soran Ichi), Conspectus of Yin
 and Zhou Bronzes, Tokyo 1984, Vol. 1 - Plates, p. 81,
 no. 1, and in  Zhongguo  Qingtongqi Quanji,  Vol.  2  -
 Shang 2, Beijing 1997, p. 82 - 83, nos. 80 - 81, and in
 Zhongguo Wenwu Jingcai Daquan, Qingtongqi, p. 22,
 no. 75.



















































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