Ritual food vessel (fangding)
Place of Originprobably Shaanxi province, China
Date1050-900 BCE
PeriodWestern Zhou period (approx. 1050–771 BCE)
MaterialsBronze
DimensionsH. 10 1/4 in x L. 7 3/8 in x Diam. 6 in, H. 26 cm x L. 18.7 cm x Diam. 15.2 cm
Credit LineThe Avery Brundage Collection
Object numberB60B954
DepartmentChinese Art
ClassificationsMetal Arts
On View
On viewLocationGallery 14
InscribedA thirty-four character inscription cast inside the vessel can be translated as follows: "On the day gengyin of the first quarter of the second month, at Zongzhou (the capital) Lu (?) Zhong presented XX with a pair of chariot feather-pennants and a horse. To extol (my) lord's bounty, (I) used (these) to make for Ji Gong this precious sacrificial vessel."
More InformationBronze Decoration of the Western Zhou Period
There was a riot of new types of decoration at the beginning of the Western Zhou period, as the leaders attempted to find their own artistic and ritual vocabulary. The pieces in this case show various solutions to these issues. Some are heavily ornamented with taotie (a kind of mythical animal) masks, dragons, birds, and large, heavy flanges; others have no surface decoration. It is hard to imagine that these pieces were made at approximately the same time by the same culture.
approx. 1042-1021 BCE
approx. 1050-950 BCE
approx. 1400-1300 BCE
approx. 1050-950 BCE
approx. 700-500 BCE
approx. 600-200 BCE
approx. 550-480 BCE
700-600 BCE
1200-1050 BCE
approx. 1200-1050 BCE
approx. 1200-1050 BCE
approx. 1200-1050 BCE