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Bronze Gui Vessel

 

A gui is an ancient round-mouthed food vessel with two to four looped handles, or ears, which was used for ceremonial rites during the Shang and Zhou dynasties (c.16th century-221 BC).

The early bronze gui had no handles on its sides. Later, gui became comparatively large, and their ears served not only as handles but also as spaces for elaborate motifs.

Nobles often needed more than one gui to host feasts or offer sacrifices. Between two and 12 of the vessels were used during banquets but the number was always a multiple of two, ancient texts say. The emperor used nine ding with eight gui, and higher ranking nobles used seven ding with six gui.

Most gui - all of the earlier vessels - have only two handles. Four-eared gui came later.

But three-handled gui, such as the one below, are rare treasures.

 

A rare bronze gui with three handles is in the Palace Museum's collection. The 19.1-centimeter-tall vessel weighs 6.94 kilograms. It has a wide, flared mouth, a 13-cm-deep bowl and a tall round base.

Its base is filled with huiwen, or spiral patterns, but the dominant design features “nipples” within rhombuses, as well as animal masks and eyes.

 

It retains the basic features typical of the Shang Dynasty (c.16th century-11th century BC) gui that don’t have handles.

The unusual features are the three handles that bear the shapes of human faces between the mouth and base.

The spiral meander is formed by lines that continuously turn in on themselves.

This motif was only used on a vessel’s neck or foot. It wasn’t until the late Shang that it served as the grounding to offset the principal ornament.

With the exception of the geometrical lines at the belly and on the walls of the square pedestal, the bronze gui vessel with dragon pattern and square pedestal is primarily decorated with animal and floral patterns. New trends conveying a sense of movement in the Western Zhou (c. 1100 ~771 BC) are especially manifested in designs on the neck and the ring foot.

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