Skip to main content
Collections Menu
SAM'S collection
Waterdropper
Waterdropper

Waterdropper

Date19th century
Label TextIndispensable objects for a scholar's desk, waterdroppers controlled the amount of water dripped onto an inkstone and were decorative as well as functional. Lotus pods symbolize fertility, and their name, lianzhi, is also a pun for "continuous sons." Turtles and peaches, as well as the figure of Shoulao riding the bull, are popular motifs for longevity. The oddly shaped citron is one of the Three Abundances in China and was popular in Japan as a scholar's accoutrement. The festive persimmon fruit, so elegantly depicted here, has long been a symbol of joy and good fortune in East Asia.
Object number92.47.67
Exhibition HistorySeattle, Washington, Seattle Asian Art Museum, "Live Long and Prosper: Auspicious Motifs in East Asian Art", May 23, 2009 - February 21, 2010
Credit LineGift of Frank D. Stout
Dimensions2 3/8 x 5 x 2 1/2 in. (6.03 x 12.7 x 6.35 cm)
MediumBronze
Waterdropper modelled as a lobster
Japanese
19th century
Object number: 92.47.68
Waterdropper modelled as a kirin
Japanese
19th century
Object number: 92.47.69
Waterdropper
Japanese
Object number: 92.47.70
Waterdropper
Japanese
Object number: 92.47.71
Waterdropper modelled as a shi shi
Japanese
19th century
Object number: 92.47.72
Waterdropper
Japanese
Object number: 92.47.73
Waterdropper modelled as a reclining dog
Japanese
19th century
Object number: 92.47.74
Waterdropper
Japanese
Object number: 92.47.75
Waterdropper
Japanese
ca. 19th century
Object number: 92.47.76
Waterdropper
Japanese
19th century
Object number: 92.47.77
Waterdropper
Japanese
19th century
Object number: 92.47.78
Waterdropper
Japanese
Object number: 92.47.81