AN UNUSUAL DING-TYPE TEA BOWL STAND
PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF IRA AND NANCY KOGER
AN UNUSUAL DING-TYPE TEA BOWL STAND

POSSIBLY NORTHERN SONG DYNASTY, 10TH-12TH CENTURY

细节
AN UNUSUAL DING-TYPE TEA BOWL STAND
POSSIBLY NORTHERN SONG DYNASTY, 10TH-12TH CENTURY
Made in the form of a rounded cup rising from a dish-form flange with petal-cut rim raised on a tall cylindrical pedestal foot with molded edge and solid base, a circular aperture in the base of the cup leading into the hollow foot, covered overall with a glaze of pale greyish-olive tone pooling in tears on the underside of the dish
6¼ in. (15.9 cm.) across

拍品专文

The shape of this stand is more than likely copying contemporary ones that were made in lacquer. See the brown lacquer stand of this form with similar petal-shaped flange dated to the 11th century in the collection of the Royal Scottish Museum, Edinburgh, illustrated by Lee Yu-kuan, Oriental Lacquer Art, New York/Tokyo, 1972, p. 108, pl. 45, and a black lacquer example dated to the 12th century, p. 93, pl. 32. See, also, the Ru ware example dated 11th-12th century in the Percival David Foundation, illustrated by M. Tregar, Song Ceramics, New York, 1982, p. 127, pl. 151.