A BRONZE JAR AND COVER, HU
A BRONZE JAR AND COVER, HU
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PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT PRIVATE ASIAN COLLECTION
A BRONZE JAR AND COVER, HU

WARRING STATES PERIOD (475-221 BC)

Details
A BRONZE JAR AND COVER, HU
WARRING STATES PERIOD (475-221 BC)
The jar is cast with bands of flower heads, those on the body between narrow borders of interlaced dragons, and is flanked by a pair of taotie masks suspending loose rings. The low, conical cover has similar decoration and four hooked projections that function as supports when the cover is inverted. The cast decoration retains traces of black inlay.
16 ½ in. (42 cm.) high
Provenance
Acquired in Hong Kong, 1990.

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Olivia Hamilton
Olivia Hamilton

Lot Essay


During the late Eastern Zhou period, 6th-3rd century BC, various inlays were sometimes used to decorate bronze vessels. These inlays included copper, silver, gold, turquoise and a black matrix, which is seen on the present hu where it fills the decoration. This kind of inlay can also be seen on two vessels of Warring States date illustrated by Jenny So, Eastern Zhou Ritual Bronzes from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections, vol. III, The Arthur M. Sackler Foundation, 1995: one a faceted hu with burnished copper inlays in a ground of black matrix, pp. 261-62, no. 45; the other a stemmed fang hu from Shanxi Taiyuan Jinshengcun M251, p. 263, fig. 45.5. A black matrix inlay can be found on bronze vessels as early as the Shang dynasty.

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