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1 août 2024

An archaic bronze tripod food vessel (Ding), Late Shang dynasty

An archaic bronze tripod food vessel (Ding), Late Shang dynasty
An archaic bronze tripod food vessel (Ding), Late Shang dynasty
An archaic bronze tripod food vessel (Ding), Late Shang dynasty
An archaic bronze tripod food vessel (Ding), Late Shang dynasty

Lot 247. Property from a German Private Collection. An archaic bronze tripod food vessel (Ding), Late Shang dynasty. Heigh 18.7cm. Lot Sold 19,050 GBP (Estimate 15,000 - 25,000 GBP). © Sotheby's 2024

 

Provenance: J.J. Lally & Co., New York.

Note: Bowls on three pointed legs were among of the earliest pottery vessels produced in China’s Neolithic period, almost eight thousand years ago. In the Bronze Age, various tripod forms were devised of which the present ding version–a globular bowl with two handles, supported on three sturdy legs–was a particularly satisfactory, functional as well as beautiful solution. It answered the needs to raise a receptacle above a fire source, to place it firmly on uneven ground, and to suspend it for carrying. One of the most important types of China’s ritual bronzes, tripod vessels of ding shape, such as the present vessel, represent one of the most fundamental Chinese vessel forms. Its unmistakable association with antiquity made the shape a classic in later dynasties, when it inspired potters of many periods and regions, even though with its tall legs it is not ideally suited to reproduction in ceramics. As incense burners, vessels of ding form belonged to the regular repertoire of the manufactories at Longquan in Zhejiang in the Southern Song (1127-1279), at Jingdezhen in Jiangxi in the late Ming (1368-1644), and at Dehua in Fujian in the Qing dynasty (1644-1911).
Compare a closely related example, discovered in Guojiazhuang, Anyang, Henan provenance, illustrated in Zhongguo qingtong qi quanji [Complete series on Chinese bronzes], vol. 2, Shang, Beijing, 1997, pl. 27; another, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, accession number: 43.27.2; and a slightly larger example, from the collection of Caroline B. Carter, sold in our New York rooms, 29th November 1993, lot 177, and again at Christie’s New York, 23rd March 2023, lot 801, from the collection of J. J. Lally & Co.

 

Sotheby's. China/5000 Years, London, 17 May 2024

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