A Rare Ding-Type Duck-Form Waterdropper
A Rare Ding-Type Duck-Form Waterdropper

FIVE DYNASTIES PERIOD, 10TH CENTURY

Details
A Rare Ding-Type Duck-Form Waterdropper
Five Dynasties period, 10th century
Hollow-molded as a seated duck with head facing forward and wings closed either side of the large opening in the back, with incised feather markings and brown glaze highlighting the eyes, the opening in the short beak connected by an interior channel to another aperture on the bottom of the interior hidden beneath the tiny figure of a turtle, covered overall with a yellowish-toned transparent glaze
5 3/8in. (13.7cm.) long, box
Falk Collection no. 153.
Provenance
C.T. Loo, New York, June 1950.

Lot Essay

This waterdropper is extremely rare. At first sight the combination of a duck with a turtle inside may seem strange, however, this was in fact the perfect gift with which to pay a subtle compliment to a sophisticated scholar. These two creatures provide a rebus (visual pun). In Chinese the word for duck is pronounced ya, while one of the Chinese names for a turtle is jia yu (literally 'armored fish'). The combination of the turtle and the duck can thus be jia ya which is pronounced the same way as a phrase meaning 'elegant and refined'.

A waterdropper of the same size and design, including the small turtle inside, is in the collection of the Palace Museum, Beijing and illustrated in Zhongguo wenwu jinghua daquan - Taoci juan, Taipei, 1993, no. 282, where it is dated to the Five Dynasties period. Another waterdropper of this same form, also with the turtle inside, is in the collection of the British Museum and is illustrated by S. Vainker in Chinese Pottery and Porcelain, London, 1991, p. 67, no. 48, where the author dates it to the 10th century and suggests it is of northern Chinese manufacture.

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