Auction Closed
March 22, 07:08 PM GMT
Estimate
40,000 - 60,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
An archaic bronze bell (Bo)
Eastern Zhou dyn💧asty, Spring and Autumn period
東周 春秋 青銅蟠螭紋鎛
Height 10 in., 25.3 cm
Christie's London, 24th June 1968, lot 168.
Collection of Dr Wou Kiuan (1910-1997).
Wou Lien-P🃏ai Museum, 1968-present, coll. no. E.8.38.
倫敦佳士得1968年6月24日,編號168
吳權博士(1910-1997)收藏
吳蓮伯博物院,1968年至今,編號E.8.38
Rose Kerr et al., Chinese Antiquities from the Wou Kiuan Collection. Wou Lien-Pai Museum, Hong Kong, 2011, pl. 27.
柯玫瑰等,《Chi♕nese Antiquities from the Wou Kiuan Collection. Wou Lien-Pai Museum》,香港,2011年,圖版27
Exquisitely cast with confronting dragons on its handle and a large taotie mask on the lower register, this magnificent bell (bo) is a fine example of bronzes created during the Eastern Zhou dynasty (770-256 BC). Known as bo zhong for their level rims and loop handlꦬes, bronze bells of this type would have been suspended from a frame and sounded by striking with🌄 a hammer.
The present piece is closely related to a set of nineteen bo zhong of graduated sizes, unearthed from the tomb of Zhaoqing, a high-ranking official of the Jin state during the late Spring and Autumn period (770-476 BC), in Taiyuan, Shanxi province, now in the collection of Shanxi Archaeology Institute, illustrated in Zhongguo qingtongqi quanji / The Complete Collection of Chinese Archaic Bronzes, Eastern Zhou, vol. 8, Beijing, 1995, pls 111-114. Compare also a larger bronze bell preserved in the British Museum, London (acc. no. 1965,0612.1), included in the International Exhibition of Chinese Art, Royal Academy of Arts, London, 1935, cat. no. 181. Compare a similar, slight🌺ly larger bell sold in these rooms, 21st September 2021, lot 39.