Period:Ming dynasty Production date:1643
Materials:porcelain
Technique:glazed, underglazed,
Dimensions:Diameter: 6.70 centimetres Height: 3 centimetres
Description:
Porcelain cup with underglaze blue decoration. It has a typical ‘transitional’ late Ming design of a man on a river bank, and on the base is an illegible character.
IMG
Comments:Harrison-Hall 2001:This provincial blue-and-white bowl was recovered from the Hatcher wreck. The glaze has lost its glossy appearance as a result of abrasive sand in the sea water during a three hundread year sojourn at the bottom of the South China Sea, yet the cobalt decoration beneath the glaze survives.Although we know that these bowls were part of a consignment for export, similar bowls excavated in a domestic context testify to the fact that porcelains of this quality were not sold exclusively to unsuspecting foreigners but were also sold and used within China. When the tomb of Hua Shiyi (1566-1629) and his wife was excavated in Wuxi county, Jiangsu province, in 1984, similar bowls were discovered associated with tea paraphernalia. The earlier date of this find suggests that similar bowls were produced over a long period with only minor variations in the design, making the dating of provincial wares extremely difficult.See BM 1984.0303.11a-b and BM 1985.1119.30,13 and 31.
Materials:porcelain
Technique:glazed, underglazed,
Dimensions:Diameter: 6.70 centimetres Height: 3 centimetres
Description:
Porcelain cup with underglaze blue decoration. It has a typical ‘transitional’ late Ming design of a man on a river bank, and on the base is an illegible character.
IMG
Comments:Harrison-Hall 2001:This provincial blue-and-white bowl was recovered from the Hatcher wreck. The glaze has lost its glossy appearance as a result of abrasive sand in the sea water during a three hundread year sojourn at the bottom of the South China Sea, yet the cobalt decoration beneath the glaze survives.Although we know that these bowls were part of a consignment for export, similar bowls excavated in a domestic context testify to the fact that porcelains of this quality were not sold exclusively to unsuspecting foreigners but were also sold and used within China. When the tomb of Hua Shiyi (1566-1629) and his wife was excavated in Wuxi county, Jiangsu province, in 1984, similar bowls were discovered associated with tea paraphernalia. The earlier date of this find suggests that similar bowls were produced over a long period with only minor variations in the design, making the dating of provincial wares extremely difficult.See BM 1984.0303.11a-b and BM 1985.1119.30,13 and 31.
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