
Cleveland Museum of Art
Wine Vessel (Hu)
- Date
- c. 1000–900 BCE
- Medium
- bronze
- Culture
- China, Western Zhou dynasty (c. 1046–771 BCE)
- Department
- Chinese Art
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
This tall, slender bronze wine vessel, called a hu , has three bands of ornamentation: one above the foot, one around the neck, and one on the cover. Stylized birds or phoenixes are in the band around the neck, while the band on the cover and foot feature geometric dragons. The dragon and the phoenix may represent the Yin and Yang and would be equally appropriate on a bronze of either secular or religious purposes. When inverted, the cover forms a cup. It likely held liquids like wine at festive banquets or religious ceremonies. The cylindrical "handles" suggest that the vessel was carried by a cord.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.

Wine Vessel (Hu) (lid)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Wine Vessel (Hu)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Hu wine vessel
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Wine Jar (Hu)
Art Institute of Chicago

Hu wine vessel
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Covered hu vessel, one of a pair
Minneapolis Institute of Art

You wine vessel
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Wine Vessel (Hu)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Hu wine vessel
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Wine Flask (Bian Hu)
Art Institute of Chicago

Hu wine vessel
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Hu wine vessel
Minneapolis Institute of Art