Page 9 - Deydier VOL.2 Meiyintang Collection of Chinese Bronses
P. 9

Since the  publication  of Volume 1 of  Chinese  Bronzes in the  Meiyintang
                            Collection,  the  collection  has  expanded  and  fifty  more  ritual  bronzes  have
                            been added to those which have already been published.

                            Many of the new acquisitions take us back to the very origins of bronze- vessel
                                                                                            th
                            casting in China or,  in other words, to the  Erlitou cultural period  (19     –
                            16  centuries  bc.)  in  the Xia dynasty and the Erligang period (16  – 14
                                                                                         th
                              th
                                                                                               th
                            centuries  bc.) at the beginning of the Shang dynasty.
                            As a result of the collector’s recently renewed concentration on these early
                            periods, the Meiyintang Collection has been able to acquire several exceptional
                            bronzes of the Erlitou period, such as the extremely rare jiao listed as no. 160
                            (p. 68) and has also, as a result, now become the most complete collection in
                            private hands of bronze ritual vessels of the Erligang period.

                            The archaic bronze vessels in the Meiyintang Collection, probably the most
                            important private collection of its type in terms of the quality, the rarity and
                            the impeccable provenances of its objects, are a concrete testament to and a
                            visual reminder of the primary importance in Chinese culture of the ancestral
                            cult.

                            The daily and seasonal rituals in which ancestral worship is enshrined have
                            continued among the Chinese for millenniums in spite of the vicissitudes of
                            life and the social and political upheavals that have marked China in the past
                            five thousand or so years and these rituals, though in a modified form, are still
                            part of the daily lives of the Chinese people today, wherever they are living, be
                            it China proper or overseas, in Southeast Asia, America, Africa or wherever.

                            In ancient China, the cult of ancestral worship prescribed certain very elaborate
                            rituals for which bronze vessels were needed, either to hold and make ritual
                            libations of fermented beverages or to hold the cooked grains and other food
                            presented as offerings to the spirits of the ancestors.  All of the various types
                            of vessels used in such rituals can be found in the Meiyintang Collection of
                            bronzes.

                            Still today, every Chinese home, every merchant’s shop and every restaurant,
                            workshop or even newspaper kiosk, no matter how small, has its altar dedicated
                            to the ancestors, on which are arranged offerings and sticks of incense and at
                            which are celebrated, though admittedly in a simplified form, rituals of filial
                            piety that trace their origins far back into Chinese cultural history to the days
                            of the Xia, Shang and Zhou.

                            I have had the unique privilege not only of working on the compilation of
                            two volumes of Chinese Bronzes from the Meiyintang Collection, but also of
                            participating very actively in the formation of this collection by carrying out
                            research on its objects, and, should I say, tracking down exceptional objects to
                            further enrich the collection.
                            I should like, in these few short lines and thus inadequately, to express here
                            my gratitude to Dr. Stephen Zuellig for the total confidence that he has placed
                            in me for almost twenty years by entrusting me with the implementation of
                            this extraordinary project.  I shall never forget the sublime compliment which
                            he recently paid me by calling me his ‘ami cher’, his ‘dear friend’, dear in the
                            two senses of the word, both beloved and expensive.

                            These two volumes would not have been able to see the light of day without
                            the invaluable and timely assistance of Ms. Raphaële Hervé de Sigalony, and
                            Messrs Vincent Girier Dufournier, Ed. O’Neill and René Bouchara.


                                                                                 Christian Deydier











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