Asianart.com | Associations | Articles | Exhibitions | Galleries |
Visitors' Forum |
Message Listing by Date: |
|
Message Index |
Back |
Post a New Message
| Search | Private Mail
| FAQ
|
Subject:Tea-Dust Glazed Covered Box Food Server
Posted By: Kevin Donnelley Mon, Aug 24, 2020 IP: 69.120.217.104 The server has a speckled dark golden brown tea-dust glaze with russet highlights on the exterior w/ a crackle suffused ivory white base interior, below the unglazed rim, and a neatly trimmed base. The glass like glaze has crystal formations on the surface from the loess ingredient- 3rd photo. |
Subject:Re: Tea-Dust Glazed Covered Box Food Server
Posted By: Kevin Donnelley Mon, Aug 24, 2020 view of the interior base. |
Subject:Re: Tea-Dust Glazed Covered Box Food Server
Posted By: Jonathan Tue, Aug 25, 2020 Hello, Not a teadust glaze. Both the Chinese and Japanese have this glaze. Japanese call it Tenmoku. Chinese say various things like Hare fur or Oil spot( not quite like that), or other terms depending on how the glaze comes out. Your piece looks Japanese to my eye and not any older than the late 19th or early 20th, but that is always difficult to be sure when the form is not specific and the piece is not in one's hand. |
Subject:Re: Tea-Dust Glazed Covered Box Food Server
Posted By: Kevin Donnelley Tue, Aug 25, 2020 Hello, |
Subject:Re: Tea-Dust Glazed Covered Box Food Server
Posted By: Kevin Donnelley Tue, Sep 01, 2020 view of the underside of the lid |
Subject:Re: Tea-Dust Glazed Covered Box Food Server
Posted By: Kevin Donnelley Wed, Sep 30, 2020 for comparison in base detail, a stoneware bowl, Jin Dynasty, Henan held in the collection of the British Museum is provided in the link below. Both examples display the outer and the inside foot rims w/ the smaller rim surrounding a foot w/ a narrow diameter. While very similarly constructed by comparison, the two bases are made distinct from each other by the element of symmetry as displayed in this example which does not appear in the Jin bowl. Here, the potter very carefully made the widths of the two rims identical to one another, as mentioned above |
Subject:Re: Tea-Dust Glazed Covered Box Food Server
Posted By: Kevin Donnelley Wed, Nov 04, 2020 a well potted Song jar for comparison w/the very closely matched glaze character consisting of the minute gold toned flecks suffused in the glaze coat. The color as described by the catalog notes is a mottled deep brown black w/a the buff -colored stoneware body |
Asianart.com | Associations | Articles | Exhibitions | Galleries | |