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Details
- Place where the work was made
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China
- Period
- Ming dynasty 1368 - 1644 → China
- Date
- 17th century
- Media category
- Metalwork
- Materials used
- bronze with silver and gold inlays
- Dimensions
- 22.0 x 24.8 x 18.5 cm
- Credit
- Purchased 1990
- Location
- Not on display
- Accession number
- 1357.1990
- Copyright
- Share
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About
In terms of shape, the ‘he’ dates back to the middle Shang dynasty. The popularity of this shape among Song cognoscenti can best be explained by its representation in the ‘Xuanhe bogu tu lu’ (the Xuanhe album of antiquities), a 30-volume catalogue of the Song imperial collection which was completed in the early 1100s and was the most famous and influential of the printed volumes on ancient bronze collections. This bronze in fact more closely resembles the imaginative and stylised depiction in the album than any Shang ‘he’. Its inlaid decoration exemplifies this transmutation: the use of inlays in brozes, an innovation acquired from the nomadic cultures of the Central Asian steppes, does not even appear until the post-Shang period of the Warring States (476-221 BCE).
‘The Asian Collections: Art Gallery of New South Wales’. pg.77
© 2003 Trustees, Art Gallery of New South Wales -
Places
Where the work was made
China
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Exhibition history
Shown in 1 exhibition
Auspicious: Motifs in Chinese art, Chau Chak Wing Museum, University of Sydney, Sydney, 16 Nov 2020–15 May 2022
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Bibliography
Referenced in 5 publications
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Jackie Menzies, AGNSW Collections, 'Asian Art - India, South-East Asia, China, Tibet, Korea, Japan', pg. 173-228, Sydney, 1994, 189 (colour illus.).
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Jackie Menzies, Antiques in New South Wales, 'Chinese Antiquarian Taste', pg. 114, Sydney, Aug 1991, cover (colour illus.), 5 (illus.), 114.
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Jackie Menzies (Editor), The Asian Collections Art Gallery of New South Wales, 'Bronzes and Jades', Sydney, 2003, 77 (colour illus.).
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Lisa Slade and Rachael Kirsten, Enter Art, Sydney, 2000, sheet number 2 (colour illus.). Education kit produced by the NSW Dept of Education and Training as teaching resource for primary school teachers.
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Year 3 - Linking Basic Skills Tests to the Curriculum. Teaching Strategies 2002., 'Linking Numeracy and Creative Arts', New South Wales, 2002, 56 (illus.).
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