Libation cup with base

Minneapolis Institute of Art

Libation cup with base

China

Date
17th-18th century
Medium
Rhinoceros horn
Department
Asian Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

This vessel, meant to serve as a libation cup during ritual ceremonies, is carved from a rhinoceros horn. The material was originally thought by Daoists to bear powerful properties that could detect poison, and artwork made from it later became scholarly objects of curiosity. The shape of this vessel references a type of ancient Chinese ritual bronze known as a gu , an indication of the scholarly fascination with archaism during imperial China. The cup itself appears to be rising from surging sea waves. A large dragon emerges from the water, reaching toward the sky, while several smaller dragons also scale the cup. Opposite the dragon is a phoenix head and neck. The appearance of a dragon and a phoenix together can be seen as a representation of the yin and yang powers of the universe, indicating the balance of opposing forces—similar to the depiction of the sea and sky. Asia

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