A FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL FOOD VESSEL, GUI
A FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL FOOD VESSEL, GUI
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PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF EVELYN ANNENBERG JAFFE HALL
A FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL FOOD VESSEL, GUI

EARLY WESTERN ZHOU DYNASTY, 11TH CENTURY BC

Details
A FINELY CAST BRONZE RITUAL FOOD VESSEL, GUI
EARLY WESTERN ZHOU DYNASTY, 11TH CENTURY BC
11 in. (28 cm.) across handles
Provenance
Tonying & Company, Inc., New York, 15 May 1962.
William B. Jaffe (1904-1972) and Evelyn Annenberg Jaffe Hall (1911-2005) Collection, New York, and thence by descent to the present owner.
Literature
Gifts and Loans from the Mr. and Mrs. William B. Jaffe Collection of Asian Art, Hanover, New Hampshire, Dartmouth College, June 1964, no. 39.
Exhibited
Hanover, New Hampshire, Dartmouth College, Gifts and Loans from the Mr. and Mrs. William B. Jaffe Collection of Asian Art, June 1964.

Brought to you by

Rufus Chen (陳嘉安)
Rufus Chen (陳嘉安) Head of Sale, AVP, Specialist

Lot Essay

Bronze gui decorated with large coiled dragons and protruding fangs are particularly characteristic of the early Western Zhou dynasty. This motif appears on the famous Tian Wang gui in the National Museum of China, Beijing, illustrated in Zhongguo qingtongqi quanji (Complete Collection of Chinese Bronzes), vol. 5: Western Zhou 1, Beijing, 1996, no. 50. From its inscription, we learn that the Tian Wang gui was cast during the reign of King Wu, the first Western Zhou king, which makes it one of the earliest dated Western Zhou bronzes.

Gui of this type appear to have two different bands of decoration on the foot: either bottle-horn dragons with long curved snouts, or S-shaped serpents. The first type is represented by the present example and a gui in the National Palace Museum, illustrated in Catalogue to the Special Exhibition of Grain Vessels of the Shang and Chou Dynasties, Taipei, 1985, pl. 23. The second type is represented by a gui excavated from a Western Zhou cemetery at Zhuyuangou near Baoji, Shaanxi province, illustrated in Wenwu, 1983, no. 2, pl. 2 fig. 2. Another gui with the S-shaped serpent band on the foot was sold at Christie's New York, 26 March, 2010, lot 1270.

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