Cup with lotus, vines, and birds

Photo: Elizabeth Mann

Cup with lotus, vines, and birds

early 8th century

Foreign imports significantly influenced Chinese arts during the Tang dynasty’s peaceful stability. The cosmopolitan capital of Chang’an (present-day Xi’an) was the largest city in the world. Its aristocratic and wealthy residents desired styles and customs from elsewhere, such as new clothing fashions, games like polo, and expensive banqueting vessels like this one. This Chinese vessel is modeled after earlier gilt silver and bronze wine cups from Sogdiana (present-day Uzbekistan and Tajikistan).
Hammered silver and cast handle, with ring-punch and gilt-chased decoration
2 1/2 in. (6.35 cm)
Diam.: 3 in.
Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection
42.5
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
location
Now on view at the Asian Art Museum

Resources

Exhibition HistoryNew York, New York, Chinese Art Society of America, 1948.

Los Angeles, California, Los Angeles County Museum, Arts of T'ang Dynasty, 1957.

Louisville, Kentucky, J. B. Speed Art Museum, "Treasures of Chinese Art", 1965.

Portland, Oregon, Portland Art Museum, "Gift to a City: Masterworks from the Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection in the Seattle Art Museum", cat. # 35

New York, New York, China Institute of America, "Chinese Gold and Silver", 1971-1972

Dayton, Ohio, Dayton Art Institute, Chinese Gold and Silver from the Tang Dynasty in American Collections, Nov.3, 1984-Sept. 22, 1985 (New York, NY, Cooper-Hewitt Museum, Feb. 5 - Apr. 21, 1985; Northampton, MA, George Walter Vincent Smith Art Museum, June 1 - July 14, 1985; and Birmingham Museum of Art)

Seattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum "Chinese Metalwork" July 12 - November 27, 1988 (07/12/1988 - 11/27/1988)

Seattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, "Timeless Grandeur: Art from China"
April 25, 2002 - June 12, 2005

Seattle, Washington, Seattle Asian Art Museum, "Chinese Art: A Seattle Perspective", December 22, 2007 - July 26, 2009 (12/22/2007 - 7/26/2009)

Seattle, Washington, Seattle Asian Art Museum, Boundless: Stories of Asian Art, Feb. 8, 2020 - ongoing.
Published References"Handbook, Seattle Art Museum: Selected Works from the Permanent Collections." Seattle, WA: Seattle Art Museum, 1951, p. 62 (b&w)

Los Angeles County Museum, cat., "Arts of T'ang Dynasty" 1957, p.122 (346)

Museum Far East, Antiquities Bull. no. 29, 1957, pl.9(b); p.63, 179, 227

Kadokawa Co., "Sui and Tang dynasties of China", History of World Art, Vol.15, no.95 (2nd section).

J. B. Speed Art Museum, Louisville, Kentucky, "Treasures of Chinese Art", cat., 1965, no.18, ill.

"Gift to a City" exhibition catalogue. Portland, OR: Portland Art Museum, 1965, cat. no. 35

Wright, Prof. A.F., Chagan, "The T'ang City, in Toynbee, Dr. A., Cities of Destiny

Singer, Dr. Paul, "Early Chinese Gold and Silver", the China Institute in America cat., 1971, #76, p. 56

Trubner, Henry , and William J. Rathbun, C.A. Kaputa, Asiatic Art in the Seattle Art Museum, 1973,p.156, #104

Kelley, Clarence W., Dayton Art Institute, Ohio, Chinese Gold and Silver from the Tang Dynasty in American Collections, 1984, p.62, cat.28.

Toynbee, Arnold. CITIES OF DESTINY. London: Thames and Hudson.

Waugh, Daniel C. "The Arts of China in Seattle." The Silk Road, vol. 12 (2014): pp. 137-152, reproduced p.144, fig. 23.

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