A CIZHOU-TYPE CARVED DARK BROWN-GLAZED MEIPING
PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF JAMES E. BREECE III
A CIZHOU-TYPE CARVED DARK BROWN-GLAZED MEIPING

JIN DYNASTY, POSSIBLY XIXIA KINGDOM, 12TH-EARLY 13TH CENTURY

Details
A CIZHOU-TYPE CARVED DARK BROWN-GLAZED MEIPING
JIN DYNASTY, POSSIBLY XIXIA KINGDOM, 12TH-EARLY 13TH CENTURY
The meiping is carved through the dark-brown glaze to the body with two foliate-shaped panels enclosing a peony blossom borne on a leafy branch, and separated by fish swimming in crashing waves.
13 in. (33 cm.) high
Provenance
Cyrus and Mildred Churchill Collection, Concordia House, Illinois.
The Concordia House Collection; Sotheby's New York, 19 March 2007, lot 139 (part).

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Lot Essay

The technique used to decorate the present vase, which involved fully glazing the vessel and then cutting away or incising the design through the glaze before firing, was employed at several kilns producing Cizhou-style ceramics in Henan and Shanxi provinces. However, stonewares decorated using the same technique were also made at the kilns to the northwest of Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. The highpoint of ceramic production in this region was under the Xi Xia or Western Xia (AD 1038-1227), a Tibetan-related people greatly influenced by Chinese culture who allied with the Liao to prevent Song incursion into the their territory. Despite numerous attacks by the Song armies, the Xia Xia remained undefeated until conquered by the invading Mongols in AD 1227.
Three meiping with similar designs of peony sprays in quatrefoil panels set against a ground of undulating waves are illustrated by Hang Tian in Xixia Ceramics, Beijing, 2010, p. 313, no. TB3001.

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