A green and ochre-glazed stoneware tradescant jar, Borneo, 17th Century or earlier
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A green and ochre-glazed stoneware tradescant jar, Borneo, 17th Century or earlier

Details
A green and ochre-glazed stoneware tradescant jar, Borneo, 17th Century or earlier
Applied at the shoulder with four small loop handles, the baluster green-glazed body moulded with scrolling lotus above a band of petals around the foot, the details picked out in a deep ochre -- 12 3/8 in. (31.5 cm.) high.
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

A jar of this type is in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, part of a collection formed by the father of John Tradescant, the donor, who died in 1627 and whose name is usually attached to the group. Wares of this type were exported from Canton or another Southern port to Indonesia, to the Philippines and to the Pacific. Similar jars are illustrated by W.B.Honey, Ceramic Art of China and other Countries of the Far East, London, 1945, pl. 81 also p. 102 (Victoria and Albert Museum example), by S. Jenyns, Ming Pottery and Porcelain, London, 1953, pl. 113B (Ex Eumorfopoulos Collection), and by B. Harrison, Pusaka Heirloom Jars of Borneo, Oxford, 1990, pl. 77 (Princessehof Museum, Leeuwarden, example).

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