Bronze ding with taotie pattern, early Western Zhou dynasty, c1050 BC. Artist: Unknown
Sujet

Bronze ding with taotie pattern, early Western Zhou dynasty, c1050 BC. Artist: Unknown

Légende

Bronze ding with taotie pattern, early Western Zhou dynasty, c1050 BC. A ritual bronze cauldron (ding) with upright loop handles supported on three plain cylindrical legs. The three lobes are each cast with a large and elaborate taotie mask, whose two large hooked horns flank a crest rising from its ridged nose, the jaws have tight hooks, the eyebrows are hatched and the eyes are in higher relief. A ding is a ritual vessel for cooked food with a round body and three legs. The shape was made and used throughout Shang-Han dynasties. Ritual vessls were used to offer food to ancestors.
Bath (England), The Museum of East Asian Art

Date

1050 av. J.-C.

Crédit

Photo12/Heritage Images

Notre référence

HRM19B72_124

Model release

Non

Licence

Droits gérés

Format disponible

17,9Mo (687,7Ko) / 18,7cm x 24,0cm / 2214 x 2831 (300dpi)

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