Description
The figure watching the stars is believed to be the messenger Zhang Qian (died 114 BCE). Legend says he lost his way in the Milky Way, where he met the Weaving Maid who gave him a stone from her loom. Zhang, in fact, holds a slab inscribed loom stone. The vessel is dated, inscribed, and has a seal of the silversmith Zhu Bishan, from Zhejiang province, who ran a workshop in the Lake Tai area near Suzhou. Zhu is one of the few Chinese silversmiths known by name, producing silverware so desirable that his name was used like a trademark by his competitors and followers. Made of pure silver, and shaped like a hollow log, the cup was assembled from several silver pieces that were then soldered together.
Provenance
Palace Collection of the Qianlong Emperor, Beijing, China; General Sir Robert Biddulph [1835–1918] (1860 or 1861–at least 1915); Sir Percival David [1892–1964], London, England, by descent to his wife Lady David (by 1935–1964); Lady Sheila Jane Yorke Hardy David [1914–?], London, England (1964–1976?); (Sotheby's, London, 14 December, 1976, lot 224, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art) (December 14, 1976); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1977–)
Accession Number
1977.7
Medium
hammered silver soldered together, with chased decoration
Dimensions
Overall: 16 cm (6 5/16 in.)
Classification
Silver
Credit Line
John L. Severance Fund