Dawenkou Culture, Shandong province, circa 2800–2500 B.C.
the thinly potted tulip-shaped cup with flaring rim and gently rounded base raised on a high hollow stem with ovoid bulbous central knop pierced with two pairs of circular apertures vertically arranged on opposite sides and resting on a domed circular foot, the pitch-black pottery with smoothly burnished surface, showing a high gloss, with traces of earth from burial.
Height 73⁄8 inches (18.7 cm)
From the Collection of Yeung Wing Tak, Hong Kong
Exhibited on loan at the opening exhibition of the Museum of the Tomb of the King of Nanyue, Guangzhou, 1993
Burnished black pottery stemcups of very similar form excavated at different Neolithic sites in Shandong province are illustrated by Valenstein in A Handbook of Chinese Ceramics, New York, 1989, p. 14, fig. 13, and by Medley in The Chinese Potter, Oxford, 1976, p. 25, fig. 12.
Other burnished black pottery stempcups of similar form found in Shandong province, Jiaoxian county and identified as Dawenkou Culture vessels are published in Jiaoxian Sanlihe (Report on the Excavation of the Sanlihe Site), Beijing, 1988, pl. XLI: 3 and in line drawings on p. 74, fig. 41.
Another black pottery cup of waisted cylindrical form on a high stem pierced with multiple holes together with a tulip-shaped cup on tall pierced stem made from grayish white pottery, both excavated from Neolithic sites in Shandong and identified as Dawenkou Culture, are illustrated in Treasures from Swallow Garden: Inaugural Exhibit of the Arthur M. Sackler Museum of Archaeology, Beijing, 1992, p. 80, no. 26 and p. 78, no. 25.
Compare also the Shandong Neolithic black pottery tulip-shaped cup on high pierced stem illustrated by Krahl, Chinese Ceramics from the Meiyintang Collection, Volume Three (I), London, 2006, p. 52, no. 1059.
新石器時代 山東 大汶口文化 黑陶高柄盃 高 18.7 厘米
Dawenkou Culture, Shandong province, circa 2800–2500 B.C.
Height 73⁄8 inches (18.7 cm)