Important Récipient Tripode Rituel Archaïque en Bronze, Liding, Fin de la Dynastie Shang, ca. 1200 avant J.-C.
Lot 21. Important Récipient Tripode Rituel Archaïque en Bronze, Liding, Fin de la Dynastie Shang, ca. 1200 avant J.-C.; Haut. 27.2 cm; 10 3/4 in. Estimation: 150,000 — 250,000 €. Lot. Vendu 507,000 €. Photo Sotheby's 2015
la panse aux parois profondes et arrondies divisée en trois légers lobes, reposant sur trois pieds colonnes ornés de cigales stylisées regardant vers le haut, les bords agrémentés de deux anses arquées quadrangulaires face à face, un léger gradin le long du col surmontant une bande de cigales horizontales stylisées entrecoupées de mamelons ceints d'un léger bourrelet et de rainures en spirales, la panse ornée de trois masques de taotie et trois dragons la tête en bas, une large arête verticale ornée en creux de motifs géométriques coupant chaque masque et chaque paire de dragons alternés sur fond de leiwen, un seul pictogramme shi à l'intérieur, la surface intérieure et extérieure entièrement recouverte d'une belle patine incrustée bleu-vert et rouge, accidents et restaurations, D.W 35/43.
Provenance: Excavated at Wuguancun, Anyang, Henan (according to David-Weill's notes).
Purchased in Shanghai 7th November 1934 by Orvar Karlbeck (Purchase number 429, Orvar Karlbeck, 'Report 7. Shanghai 7th November 1934'. Volume I. The Karlbeck Syndicate Archive, Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, Stockholm).
Acquired from Orvar Karlbeck, Stockholm, in 1935 for $1500 (according to David-Weill's notes).
Literature: Umehara Sueji, Yin Hsu. Ancient Capital of the Shang Dynasty at An-Yang, Tokyo, 1964, pl. 68.1.
Bernard Karlgren, 'Marginalia on some Bronze Albums', in Bulletin of the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, no. 31, 1969, p. 302.
A liding of the same size and design is in the Oppenheim Collection, London. It is illustrated by Bernard Karlgren in 'New Studies on Chinese Bronzes', Bulletin of the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, no. 9, 1937, pl. X, no. 248, and in Bernard Karlgren, 'Marginalia on some Bronze Albums', in Bulletin of the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, no. 31, 1959, pl. 23.b, where Karlgren refers to the 'exactly similar vessel in the D. Weill Collection', ibid., p. 302. Other examples featuring cicadas on a band below the rim are illustrated in Max Loehr, Ritual Vessels of Bronze Age China, New York, 1968, p. 68, no. 26, Edward Kidder, Early Chinese Bronzes in the City Art Museum of St. Louis, St. Louis, 1956, pl. 7.
The single pictogramm cast below the inside rim depicts a a hand holding a document and may be transcribed as shireferring to a 'recorder' or 'scribe'. The same pictogramm appears on a ritual bronze vessel, gui, from the Brundage Collection, published in Rene-Yvon Levebvre d'Argence, Bronze Vessels of Ancient China in the Avery Brundage Collection, Tokyo/San Francisco, 1977, pl. IX. left and fig. 11. d'Argence refers to another ritual bronze cast with the same pictogramm in the Freer Collection, see John A. Pope, The Freer Bronzes, Washington, 1969, p. 53.