A BRONZE BOTTLE VASE
A BRONZE BOTTLE VASE
A BRONZE BOTTLE VASE
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A BRONZE BOTTLE VASE

TANG DYNASTY (AD 618-907)

Details
A BRONZE BOTTLE VASE
TANG DYNASTY (AD 618-907)
The vase has an ovoid body surmounted by a slender neck rising to a flared rim, and has a silvery black patina with cuprite and malachite encrustation.
7 3/4 in. (19.7 cm.) high
Provenance
J. J. Lally & Co., New York, no. 4885.

Brought to you by

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

Lot Essay

Vases of this shape, known as ambrosia vases, were often shown in Buddhist images and sculpture carried by the bodhisattva Guanyin (Avalokiteśvara). They were thought to contain the healing elixir that the bodhisattva could pour out for mortals seeking salvation.

A bronze vase of very similar form in the Idemitsu Museum, Tokyo, is illustrated in Ancient Chinese Arts in the Idemitsu Collection, Tokyo, 1989, no. 330, where it is dated Sui-Tang dynasty. Another similar bronze vase in the Tokyo National Museum is illustrated in Chūgoku no kyōdō: rokuro hiki no seidōki (Tin-Bronze of China: Bronzes of the Potter’s Wheel), Osaka, 1999, p. 32, no. 56. See, also, the Tang bronze vase of very similar form in the Minneapolis Institute of Art, illustrated by R. Jacobsen in Appreciating China – Gifts from Ruth and Bruce Dayton, Minneapolis, 2002, no. 56, no. 24.

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