The Finer Collection of Bronzes and Hand Warmers - 11th November 2025
Lot 20
A CHINESE BRONZE 'IMMORTALS' ARROW VASE, TOUHU
Estimate £3,000 - £5,000 | Hammer £5334
Inc. Buyers Premium
Description
A CHINESE BRONZE 'IMMORTALS' ARROW VASE, TOUHU
MING DYNASTY
The compressed globular body raised on a reticulated foot and surmounted by a tall cylindrical neck set with two tubular rings, the body decorated with a qilin and a buffalo, with beast masks and ruyi-shaped flanges to the sides, the neck depicting Immortals including the Queen Mother of the West, Xiwangmu, all reserved against wave and diaper grounds, with a paper label for the Finer Collection 'CB 68', 9kg, 49cm.
明 銅西王母紋貫耳投壺
The game of touhu involved pitching arrows into narrow tubular-necked pots and had been a popular game from about 770 BC. In the Ming dynasty, the game became more widespread and was played by rich merchants and scholars as well as the aristocracy. Wang Ti, active during the Jiajing period, noted about the production of arrow vases in his Touhu yijie (Rules of Playing Touhu): 'Some fancy craftsmen recently also created some unconventional forms of touhu, some can dangle like a swing, some are of exaggerated size, some are with two handles, some even with four!'; see Wang Ti, Touhu yijie, Beijing, p.40. Refer also to Isabelle Lee, ‘Touhu: Three Millennia of the Chinese Arrow Vase and the Game of Pitch-Pot, Transactions of the Oriental Ceramic Society , vol 56, pp. 13-27 for further discussion of the game.
From the Finer Collection of later bronzes and hand warmers.