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Subject:KOREAN CERAMICS
Posted By: Bill H Thu, Sep 28, 2023 IP: 2601:346:0:21b0:8cbe

here's a link to a recent Sotheby's auction of Korean ceramics. Hope it works here, as collectors might benefit from the descriptions and images when evaluating their own pieces.

Best regards,

Bill H.

Link :Korean Ceramics


Subject:KOREAN CERAMICS
Posted By: rat Wed, Oct 04, 2023

thanks Bill, the link does not work for me, I get an error message on the Sotheby's site, can you repost?

Subject:Re: KOREAN CERAMICS
Posted By: Bill H Wed, Oct 04, 2023

Let's see if this one works:

https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2023/sublime-beauty-korean-ceramics-from-a-private-collection-part-ii?cmp=email_Daily_Marketing_Email_verB_Hero__N11286_SUBLIME_BEAUTY_Korean_Ceramics_from_a_Private_Collection_Part_II_26-Sep-23&utm_campaign=MARDailyEmailLIVE&utm_content=email_v49&utm_medium=email&utm_source=zaius&zm64_id=amF4eG9uYmlsbEBiZWxsc291dGgubmV0

I've put it below as well.

Fingers crossed.

Bill H.

URL Title :Korean Wares Auction


Subject:Re: KOREAN CERAMICS
Posted By: Bill H Fri, Oct 06, 2023

Rat, try pasting the below link in a separate browser and see if it works. It does for me.

https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2023/sublime-beauty-korean-ceramics-from-a-private-collection-part-ii?

Bill H.

Subject:Re: KOREAN CERAMICS
Posted By: rat Sat, Oct 07, 2023

That takes me to a listing of all the lots in the sale. There's an essay somewhere on the website relating to the moon jar, is that what you are trying to post?

In your previous post, one of the links seems broken and the other delivers me to the same webpage as this one does.

Subject:Re: Re: KOREAN CERAMICS
Posted By: Bill H Tue, Oct 10, 2023

I posted this for the info of anyone who collects Korean wares, figuring they might benefit from comparative information. Sotheby's longer URL in the first posting apparently is loaded to prevent disclosure of the selling prices to non account-holders.

If there was a relevant essay I missed it.

Cheers,

Bill

Subject:Re: Re: KOREAN CERAMICS
Posted By: rat Thu, Oct 12, 2023

Here's what I found relating to the moon jar they offered:

Moon jars (dalhangari) are named for their spherical form and white color which evoke a full moon. The unique hue of each jar depends on the natural properties of the clay used in its production, and the effect of the thin glaze on its surface which varies from transparent to slightly milky in tone. From their inception, these vessels have been admired for their minimalist aesthetic, in which the plentiful proportions coexist harmoniously with the restrained surface treatment, qualities that equate to contemporaneous neo-Confucian values extolling the moral fullness that accompanies a life dedicated to pursuing purity, modesty, and essential truths.

Excavations of the pottery shards from the official kiln sites reveal that moon jars were first made in the early 1600s, and their popularity grew throughout the 17th and 18th centuries, when private kilns began imitating the newly iconic form. Moon jars were produced by forming two roughly hemispherical bowls on a wheel, joining them together at the rims to form the upper and lower halves of the jar, dipping the resulting jar in a transparent or white-tinged translucent glaze, and firing it at a high temperature. The craftsmen took care to make the two halves compatible, but to avoid making them identical. Subtle irregularities between the upper and lower body, the contours of the sides, and the tonality and texture of the surface, were retained in the finished product to reveal the process and materials unique to each jar. In other words, the potter had to restrain himself from overly refining the jar, lest his extra effort strip out the qualities of the clay and human touch that give the vessel its vitality.

Compare two closely related examples in museum collections: one 17th century moon jar is housed in the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago (accession no. 2001.413 ) and an 18th century example is in Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles (accession no. M.2000.15.114 ). Two closely related examples in auction records: one was sold at Christie's New York, 26th March 1991, lot 285, and then again in these rooms, 22nd September 2022, lot 503; and the other one sold at Christie's New York, 21st March, 2023. Another slightly large example formerly in the Harry G.G. Packard Collection of Asian Art, now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City (accession no. 1979.413.1 ). Also compare two larger examples: one formerly in the Avery Brundage Collection, now in the Asian Art Museum, San Francisco (accession no. B60P110+ ) and the other in National Museum of Korea, Seoul (accession no. Treasure 1437 ).


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