Period:Qing dynasty Production date:18thC
Materials:stoneware
Technique:relief
Subjects:architectural feature
Dimensions:Diameter: 6.20 inches (with spout and handle) Height: 2.60 inches
Description:
Yixing ware tea-pot in the form of a Han dynasty impressed brick, complete with calligraphy in low relief. Made of grey-brown ceramic, stoneware.
IMG
Comments:Rawson 1992:Yixing is a town in Jiangsu province, inmediately north of Zhejiang province, renowned for red and brown unglazed wares known mainly in the West by the teapots they inspired in Germany (Bottger porcelain) and Staffordshire, and from which they are not always easily distinguished. Though kilns had existed in this area since the Song dynasty, it was in the late Ming that demand for wares became high, with the work of Shi Dabin, the most famous Ming potter. In the Qing dynasty Yixing teapots and small ornaments in natural form remained collectable and the written work ‘Yanxian minghu xi’ by Zhou Gaoqi (1695), for example, is devoted to the ware. The wares have an intricacy which matched the bamboo and wood carvings valued by the scholar-officials. It is this alignment with the values of the scholar-officials that contributed to the high esteem of Yixing ware. Its popularity with collectors has never waned, and the red and brown individually created wares of Yixing remain amongst the most highly priced contemporary Chinese ceramics.Reproductions of archaic objects such as tiles and bells were made increasingly throughout the late Qing dynasty.
Materials:stoneware
Technique:relief
Subjects:architectural feature
Dimensions:Diameter: 6.20 inches (with spout and handle) Height: 2.60 inches
Description:
Yixing ware tea-pot in the form of a Han dynasty impressed brick, complete with calligraphy in low relief. Made of grey-brown ceramic, stoneware.
IMG
Comments:Rawson 1992:Yixing is a town in Jiangsu province, inmediately north of Zhejiang province, renowned for red and brown unglazed wares known mainly in the West by the teapots they inspired in Germany (Bottger porcelain) and Staffordshire, and from which they are not always easily distinguished. Though kilns had existed in this area since the Song dynasty, it was in the late Ming that demand for wares became high, with the work of Shi Dabin, the most famous Ming potter. In the Qing dynasty Yixing teapots and small ornaments in natural form remained collectable and the written work ‘Yanxian minghu xi’ by Zhou Gaoqi (1695), for example, is devoted to the ware. The wares have an intricacy which matched the bamboo and wood carvings valued by the scholar-officials. It is this alignment with the values of the scholar-officials that contributed to the high esteem of Yixing ware. Its popularity with collectors has never waned, and the red and brown individually created wares of Yixing remain amongst the most highly priced contemporary Chinese ceramics.Reproductions of archaic objects such as tiles and bells were made increasingly throughout the late Qing dynasty.
© Copyright
The copyright of the article belongs to the author, please keep the original link for reprinting.
THE END