Tripod bowl with cover (dui)
Place of OriginHenan province or Hubei province, China
PeriodWarring States period (approx. 475-221 BCE)
CultureChu culture
MaterialsCharcoal-colored low-fired ceramic with traces of tin foil
DimensionsOverall: H. 8 3/4 in × W. 7 in × D. 6 7/8 in (22.2 cm × 17.8 cm × 17.5 cm)
Credit LineThe Avery Brundage Collection
Object numberB60P1828.a-.b
DepartmentChinese Art
ClassificationsCeramics
On View
Not on viewProbably modified from bronze ding and gui shapes of the Shang-Zhou era, the dui appeared in the southern central Chu region during the late Spring and Autumn period. The Chu, who conducted funeral and ceremonial rites different from the people of the Central Plains, used two standard sets of ritual vessels consisting of dui, ding, and hu, or fu, ding, and hu. Most pottery dui maintained the shape of their bronze counterparts but, as seen in this piece, omitted the multiple-looped handles commonly placed on bronze dui. The Chu dui, with its two equal segments of cover and body, is distinctive from the northern dui with its more shallow cover. The soft-paste black ware embellished with metal foil was a special product of the Chu manufactured during the Warring States period.