ink-stone BM-PDF-A.758

Period:Ming dynasty Production date:1600-1644
Materials:porcelain
Technique:underglazed, wucai,

Dimensions:Height: 39 millimetres Width: 115 millimetres

Description:
Porcelain ink slab and water receptacle in form of rectangular bowl with four-fifths unglazed for ink grinding. Sides roughly decorated in wucai style with greyish underglaze blue and overglaze enamels with flower sprays on long sides and sketched emblems on short sides. There is a mark on the base.
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图片[1]-ink-stone BM-PDF-A.758-China Archive

Comments:Published PDF date : Ming early 17th century Room 95 label text:PDF A758Ink stone with flowersThe writer holds a solid ink cake or stick and dissolves it into a liquid by slowly rubbing or grinding it against the smooth area of the ink stone moistened by water. As the grinding continues, more water is added and the liquid ink pools in the sunken part of the stone. Ink stones should be abrasive enough to grind the ink and smooth enough not to damage the fine hairs of the brush. Potters added an apocryphal Hongwu (AD 1368–98) reign mark in red enamel to the base. Porcelain with underglaze cobalt-blue and overglaze enamels Jingdezhen, Jiangxi province江西省, 景德鎮Ming dynasty, about, AD 1600–44 PDF A758花卉紋瓷硯書寫者手持固體墨餅或墨條,緩慢地在硯臺上用水潤濕的光滑部位磨擦研磨,逐漸溶解。在研磨的過程中要適時加水,使墨汁積聚在硯臺下凹處。硯臺既要足夠粗澀來研磨墨,又要足夠細滑而不損傷筆的細毫。陶工們在外底署紅彩洪武(1368–1398年)寄託年款。瓷器,青花,釉上彩江西省景德鎮明代,約1600–1644年
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