A RARE CRYSTAL-INLAID RED AND BLACK LACQUERED RITUAL SPOON, BI
A RARE CRYSTAL-INLAID RED AND BLACK LACQUERED RITUAL SPOON, BI
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A RARE CRYSTAL-INLAID RED AND BLACK LACQUERED RITUAL SPOON, BI

WESTERN HAN DYNASTY (206 BC-AD 9)

Details
A RARE CRYSTAL-INLAID RED AND BLACK LACQUERED RITUAL SPOON, BI
WESTERN HAN DYNASTY (206 BC-AD 9)
The spoon has a long slender handle and a flat ovoid bowl centered with a faceted rock crystal insert. It is decorated on the handle and on the reverse of the bowl with red scrollwork painted on a dark brownish-black lacquer ground.
10 1/4 in. (26 cm.) long, composite stand, plexiglass case
Provenance
Acquired in Hong Kong, 1995.
J. J. Lally & Co., New York, no. 2120.

Brought to you by

Margaret Gristina (葛曼琪)
Margaret Gristina (葛曼琪) Senior Specialist, VP

Lot Essay

A similarly decorated lacquer ritual spoon of closely related form but without a rock crystal insert was discovered at the Qin State cemetery in Shuihudi, Yunmeng, Hubei province, and is illustrated in Yunmeng Shuihudi Qin mu (Qin Tombs in Shuihudi, Yunmeng County), Beijing, 1981, pl. 17, no. 2 and in a line drawing on p. 33, pl. 34.

Archaeologists and scholars today refer to this form of long-handled spoon as a bi. According to the Eastern Han dynasty historian Zheng Xuan (AD 127-200) in his commentary on ancient rituals, the bi was used to handle and divide food during ceremonies.

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