Artwork Page for Spoon with Fish-Tail Design

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Spoon with Fish-Tail Design

연미형 청동 수저 [魚尾形靑銅匙]

918–1392
Medium
bronze
Measurements
Overall: 26.9 cm (10 9/16 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

Bronze spoons are the most common burial item. Scholars have proposed that toward the end of the 14th century, Koreans enjoyed meat-based soups more than any other dishes, explaining why spoons became common household items as well as burial goods.

Description

Many of Goryeo period spoons like this one feature a curved handle that splits into a jagged fishtail design. This fishtail design is not unique to Korea; it was also widely used in the area under the rule of two non-Han Chinese states: Liao (907–1125) and Jin (1115–1234). These seemingly ordinary objects testify to exciting material interactions between the Goryeo dynasty and non-Han Chinese northern states, which were often omitted from the official records.
A dark green bronze spoon features a pointed oval bowl narrowing toward the bottom left and a long, slender handle with mottled light green patches. Tapering as it rises toward the top right, the handle is decorated with horizontal and diagonal incised lines before widening into a flattened fishtail design with flared points.

Spoon with Fish-Tail Design

918–1392

Korea, Goryeo dynasty (918–1392)

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