9 UMMA Objects
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Pierre Bonnard (French (culture or style))
Le Coup et le Comptoir
1867 – 1947
Bequest of Mrs. John Alexander
1992/2.6

Marsden Hartley (American (North American))
Flowers in a Goblet #2
1923
Museum Purchase
1958/1.96

Iraqi
Bowl with figure holding goblet and flask
867 – 999
Museum purchase made possible by the Margaret Watson Parker Art Collection Fund
1961/1.187
This cup consists of two parts such as the long cup and the midsection containing balls. It has a wide mouth together with a large and flat bottom. Two protruding bands divide the sup into four fields, with the bottom three being decorated with incised gouged dots patterns. The midsection has two areas divided by a protruding band. Both areas have some triangular perforations<br />
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This is a grayish brown, low-fired earthenware bell cup. The bell section is in the shape of two cups attached together at the rim; one cup is upright, while the other cup is reversed. This bell is attached to the base of the cup. The body of the cup is divided into four segments by three sets of raised bands; the lower three segments feature vertical lines of dots. The body of the bell is divided into upper and lower sections, each of which contains a series of triangular perforations offset from those of the other segment. Vertical lines of dots, the same as those on the body, were applied between the perforations in the
Korean (Korean (culture or style))
Bell Cup (goblet with rattle base)
5th century
Gift of Bruce and Inta Hasenkamp and Museum purchase made possible by Elder and Mrs. Sang-Yong Nam
2004/1.170
Wine drinking goblet or beaker with a wide, trumpet-shaped mouth, narrow, banded waist, and flaring foot. The slender silhouette of the vessel suggests a date towards the end of the Late Shang period. The body is decorated with Tao-tie mask design, divided by the elaborate raised flanges. An inscription is found inside the flaring foot, presumably the name of the person that the vessel is dedicated or the clan emblem.
Chinese (Chinese (culture or style))
Gu (libation goblet, one of a pair with 1948/1.118)
8700 BCE
Bequest of Margaret Watson Parker
1948/1.117
Wine drinking goblet or beaker with a wide, trumpet-shaped mouth, narrow, banded waist, and flaring foot. The slender silhouette of the vessel suggests a date towards the end of the Late Shang period. The body is decorated with Tao-tie mask design, divided by the elaborate raised flanges. An inscription is found inside the flaring foot, presumably the name of the person that the vessel is dedicated.
Chinese (Chinese (culture or style))
Gu (libation goblet, one of a pair with 1948/1.117)
8700 BCE
Bequest of Margaret Watson Parker
1948/1.118

Kitagawa Utamaro (Japanese (culture or style))
Meisho koshikake hakkei: Young woman with a glass goblet
1790
Transfer from the College of Architecture and Design
1972/2.116

Jonah Kinigstein
The Royal Family
1952
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Roy R. Neuberger
1962/2.13

Daniel Marot
Covered Goblet with Attributes of the Hunt
1663 – 1752
Museum Purchase
1959/2.58
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