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Photo: Susan A. Cole
Ding
Photo: Susan A. Cole

Ding

Date12th century B.C.
Label TextShang dynasty bronze ritual vessels come in many shapes, and held offerings for the ruler’s ancestors. This round tripod is a food container known as ding. The main decoration is a mysterious, zoomorphic (animal-like) design with eyes, fangs, and horns—later called the taotie. A clan symbol is cast on the interior. Bronze vessels are technological marvels and demonstrate the sophistication of early Chinese civilization. Their inscriptions are the earliest examples of the Chinese written language. Antiquarians of the Qing dynasty (1633–1911) studied epigraphy (ancient writing) through these inscriptions, often from ink rubbings.
Object number49.152
Photo CreditPhoto: Susan A. Cole
Exhibition HistorySeattle Art Museum, Washington, Chinese Metalwork, June 12 - Nov. 27, 1988. Seattle, Washington, Seattle Asian Art Museum, Chinese Art: A Seattle Perspective, Dec. 22, 2007 - July 26, 2009. Tokyo, Japan, Suntory Museum of Art, Luminous Jewels: Masterpieces of Asian Art From the Seattle Art Museum, July 25 - Sept. 6, 2009 (Kobe, Japan, Kobe City Museum, Sept. 19 - Dec. 6, 2009; Kofu, Japan, Yamanashi Prefectural Museum of Art, Dec. 23, 2009 - Feb. 28, 2010; Atami, Japan, MOA Museum of Art, Mar. 13 - May 9, 2010; Fukuoka, Japan, Fukuoka Art Museum, May 23 - July 19, 2010). Seattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, Luminous: The Art of Asia, Oct. 13, 2011 - Jan. 8, 2012. Seattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, Pure Amusements: Wealth, Leisure, and Culture in Late Imperial China, Dec. 24, 2016 - May 15, 2022.Published ReferencesChinese Art Society of America, "Archives", VI 1950, p. 70, fig. 18 "Handbook, Seattle Art Museum: Selected Works from the Permanent Collections." Seattle, WA: Seattle Art Museum, 1951, p. 44 (b&w) Lee, Sherman, "History of Far Eastern Art", 1964, p. 39, fig. 26, p. 37 Knight, Michael. "Early Chinese Metalwork in the Collection of the Seattle Art Museum." Seattle, WA: Seattle Art Museum, 1989, no. 5, pp. 8-10 Kawai, Masatomo, Yasuhiro Nishioka, Yukiko Sirahara, editors, "Luminous Jewels: Masterpieces of Asian Art From the Seattle Art Museum", 2009, The Yomiuri Shimbun, catalogue number 59 O'Riley, Michael Kampen. Art Beyond the West 3rd ed. Boston: Pearson Eduction, 2014; p. 112, reproduced fig. 4.3.
Credit LineGift of Mrs. Donald E. Frederick
Dimensions9 1/2 x 8 3/8 in. (24.1 x 21.27 cm)
MediumBronze
Bronze covered Ding
3rd century B.C.
Object number: 40.15
Photo: Susan A. Cole
early to mid-11th century BCE
Object number: 54.177
Temple Bell
Thai
13th-18th century
Object number: 68.9
Incense burner in the form of a bird
Persian
13th century
Object number: 49.46
Silk Worm
Object number: 52.125
Pole Terminal
650-106 B.C.
Object number: 52.127
Photo: National Research Institute of Cultural Heritage, Republic of Korea
Korean
9th-10th century
Object number: 35.615
Photo: Paul Macapia
mid 11th-10th century B.C.
Object number: 51.67
Qi (Ceremonial Axe)
late 16th-late 11th century BCE
Object number: 48.78