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Eloge de l'Art par Alain Truong
24 juin 2009

Indianaplis Museum of Art, Asian Art Highlights : Ritual wine server (guang), Shang dynasty

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Ritual wine server (guang), bronze,  H: 8 1/4 in. | L: 9 in. Shang dynasty, about 1100 BCE Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Eli Lilly. photo Indianaplis Museum of Art

This intricately decorated ritual wine vessel, or guang, was made during the Shang dynasty, when the piece-mold technology to create objects in bronze had evolved to a level of sophistication unparalleled among the world’s ancient civilizations. The scale of ancient China’s bronze industry—implied by the number of vessels that survive and the labor-intensive processes, from mining to casting, required to produce works with this alloy of copper, tin, and lead—suggests a state with a highly developed social organization and control over complex resources.

The guang’s removable lid allows it to be easily filled with wine, and animal motifs cast in relief adorn its surface. The meaning, if any, of this lively decoration is unknown, but the intricate design joining fifteen imaginary, powerful-looking beasts has a supernatural quality, suggesting a mystical world beyond our own. Because such vessels were made for specific celebrants, who employed them in rituals honoring their ancestors, they were often buried with their owners. It was during the Shang dynasty that writing developed in China; a character cast inside the lid is probably the owner’s clan sign, linking this guang with several other vessels in museums around the world. This vessel likely came from the last capital of the Shang, Anyang, in Henan province, because it is stylistically similar to other works excavated in this area.

My ancestors, were they not men? How can they continue to see me suffer?
—Chinese folk song, about 1000 BCE

www.imamuseum.org

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