PAIR OF CROUCHING MYTHICAL BEASTS Current and Past Exhibitions Catalogue no. 17.PAIR OF CROUCHING MYTHICAL BEASTS. CHINA.WARRING STATES PERIOD.475 – 221 BC. L. 10 CMS, 4 INS. A pair of striking bronze mythical beasts, each animal cast in a crouched position with legs tucked underneath and tail curled around its haunches as if the animal is waiting to pounce, its head held low with nose upturned, teeth bared and ears flat, a central horn curling between the ears; their bodies exquisitely inlaid with decorative silver spirals. These bronze mythical beasts were probably used as weights. Compare to a bronze ox dating to the Warring States period, unearthed in 1956 in Shou County, Anhui province and illustrated as cat. no. 4-1-10, page 63, National Museum of Chinese History, Exhibition of Chinese History, Beijing: Morning Glory Publishers, 1998. PROVENANCE: Private English collection. Acquired by the owner’s father during employment with the British Foreign Service during the 1950s or 1960s.
| PAIR OF BRONZE RECUMBENT OXEN Current and Past Exhibitions Catalogue no. 21.PAIR OF BRONZE RECUMBENT OXEN. CHINA.WARRING STATES PERIOD.475 – 221 BC.L. 8.5 CMS, 3 3/8 INS. . A fine pair of recumbent bronze oxen, each animal solidly cast with folded legs, their horned heads turned to one side and tails swished over their backs; their bodies exquisitely inlaid with decorative spirals of gold and silver. These bronze oxen were probably used as weights. Compare to an exquisite pair of bronze leopards with garnet eyes, unearthed in the tomb of Princess Dou Wan (2nd century BC) and illustrated on page 107, C. Blunden and M. Elvin, Cultural Atlas of China, Phaidon, 1983. PROVENANCE: Private English collection. Acquired by the owner’s father during employment with the British Foreign Service during the 1950s or 1960s.
| BRONZE OCTAFOIL MIRROR Current and Past Exhibitions Catalogue no. 12.BRONZE OCTAFOIL MIRROR.CHINA.TANG DYNASTY.618 – 907 AD.D. 11.5 CMS, 4 ½ INS. . An octafoil mirror decorated with a pair of Mandarin ducks and a pair of swans surrounding a central knob in the form of a crouching animal, the outer rim raised and border decorated with floral sprays. The silvery colour is due to a high tin content in the bronze. For a comparable mirror, see fig. 68, page 75 in Chou Ju-Hsi, Circles of Reflection: The Carter Collection of Chinese Bronze Mirrors, The Cleveland Museum of Art, 2000. See also fig. 59, A. Soper, Chinese, Korean and Japanese Bronzes, Rome, 1966. PROVENANCE: Private English collection. Acquired by the owner’s father during employment with the British Foreign Service during the 1950s or 1960s.
| ARCHAIC BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL WITH SWING HANDLE (YOU) Current and Past Exhibitions Catalogue no. 20.ARCHAIC BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL WITH SWING HANDLE (YOU).CHINA.EASTERN ZHOU PERIOD.770 - 221 BC.H. 17.5 CMS, 6 7/8 INS. A fine archaic bronze ritual wine vessel and cover (you), the vessel of oval bodied form rising from a flared foot, the shoulder simply cast with a deep band of angular leiwen bordered by thread relief circles and set with two loops securing a single ropetwist handle set across the long axis, the domed cover decorated with similar patterning and surmounted by a rounded knop, the bronze bearing a greyish-green patina with some areas of brighter encrustation. For an earlier, Western Zhou example please see page 54, plate 21 in Julia White and Ronald Otsuka, Pathways to the Afterlife: Early Chinese Art from the Sze Hong Collection, Denver Art Museum, 1993. PROVENANCE: Private English collection. Acquired by the owner’s father during employment with the British Foreign Service during the 1950s or 1960s.
| ARCHAIC BRONZE RITUAL FOOD VESSEL AND COVER (DING) Current and Past Exhibitions Catalogue no. 16.ARCHAIC BRONZE RITUAL FOOD VESSEL AND COVER (DING). CHINA.WARRING STATES PERIOD.475 - 221 BC.H. 20 CMS, 8 INS. W. (ACROSS HANDLES). 24.2 CMS, 9 ½ INS. A fine archaic bronze ritual food vessel and cover (ding), the globular body standing on three cabriole legs and set with two upright arch handles with rope-twist borders; the gently domed cover set with three loop finials, the body divided by a horizontal ridge separating two finely cast bands of dragon scrolls in flat relief, the cover with three further bands of dragon scrolls, the bronze bearing a greyish-green patina with some areas of brighter encrustation. Note: The three loop finials on the cover are for use as feet when the vessel is upturned as a dish. For a similar example see no 61A in William Watson, Ancient Chinese Bronzes, Faber and Faber, 1977. For another vessel in the Stuttgart Museum, see fig. 11 in J. Kalter et al, Ferne Völker Frühe Zeiten: Kunstwerke aus dem Linden-Museum, Stuttgart, 1982. PROVENANCE: Private English collection. Acquired by the owner’s father during employment with the British Foreign Service during the 1950s or 1960s.
| A massive iron temple bell A massive iron temple bell with a Chinese inscription on the side.Height: 100 cm, 39 1/2 ins.Diameter: 79 cm, 31 ins.Chinese, Ming Dynasty (1368-1644).
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