An Olive-Brown-Glazed Jar
BLACK AND BROWN WARES
An Olive-Brown-Glazed Jar

NORTHERN SONG DYNASTY, 10TH-11TH CENTURY

Details
An Olive-Brown-Glazed Jar
Northern Song dynasty, 10th-11th century
With rounded body, shallow canted shoulder and wide neck rising to an hexagonal, rolled foliate rim, covered inside and out with a finely speckled opaque glaze of deep teadust tone falling in an irregular line atop a transparent wash of the same tone, with some small iron-brown splashes.
5 1/8in. (13cm.) across
Falk Collection no. 12.

Lot Essay

The distinctive form of this jar is discussed by L. Rotondo-McCord in the catalogue for the exhibition, Heaven and Earth Seen Within: Song Ceramics from the Robert Barron Collection, New Orleans Museum of Art, 2000, p. 50, who traces its development from its first appearance in the ninth century through the Song dynasty, when jars of this type were particularly popular. The author cites that such jars may have functioned as waste receptacles for wine dregs or tea leaves.

A very similar jar is illustrated by M. Sullivan, Chinese Ceramics, Bronzes and Jades in the Collection of Sir Alan and Lady Barlow, London, 1963, pl. 52a.

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