● On view now — Gallery 132
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Several types of chime bells were cast toward the end of China's Bronze Age and were probably played together in concert. Smallest among these were niuzhong , which had concave rims. Niuzhong were cast in graduated sizes, assembled as a set (often of nine), and suspended from a horizontal beam in order of size. Each bell was designed to emit two distinct tones: one from striking the center of the lower panel, another from striking either corner. The mask centered on the striking panel of this bell is an abstraction of ferocious monster designs seen on earlier bronze vessels.
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China, probably Hunan province — Bell (nao)
Sri Lanka — Stupa Reliquary
China
Shaanxi province — Wine Container
China
probably from Zhejiang province — Mirror with Images
China, Qishan county, Shaanxi province — Architectural Fitti
China, Qishan county
Shaanxi province — Architectural Fittin
China
probably from Shaanxi province — Tripod Cauldron (Din
Italian — Fencing Buckler
Chavín — Stirrup-Spout Vessel with Feline and Cactus
Italian — Gun Shield
China
Probably from Qishan, Shaanxi province — Covered Food
Moche — Stirrup Spout Vessel with Composite Feline Fish Reli