A PAIR OF YAOZHOU CELADON FLOWER-FORM BOWLS
PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTION
A PAIR OF YAOZHOU CELADON FLOWER-FORM BOWLS

NORTHERN SONG DYNASTY, 11TH CENTURUY

Details
A PAIR OF YAOZHOU CELADON FLOWER-FORM BOWLS
NORTHERN SONG DYNASTY, 11TH CENTURUY
Each with deep rounded sides rising from a tall cylindrical foot to the out-curved petal-cut rim, the sides of the interior applied with six slip ribs that rise to the slight notches cut in the rim, covered inside and out with a glaze of grey-green color that thins on the ribs and falls to the top of the high foot which is covered with a thin clear glaze
4½ and 4 3/8 in. (11.5 and 11.2 cm.) diam., wood stands, boxes (2)
Provenance
The Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Bernat; Sotheby's, New York, 7 November 1980, lot 144.
Spink & Son Ltd., London, 1983.
Exhibited
Chinese Ceramics of the Sung Dynasty, Currier Gallery of Art, Manchester, New Hampshire, 1959, p. 4, no. 49.

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Lot Essay

The shape of these high-footed, flower-form bowls is related to lacquer bowls of this shape produced during the Song dynasty, such as the black lacquer bowl inscribed with a date corresponding to 1082 in the Tenri Museum, Japan, illustrated by S. Riddell, Dated Chinese Antiquities, 600-1650, London/Boston, 1979, p. 202, no. 158. See, also, a Yaozhou celadon bowl of this shape with ribs similarly applied to the interior walls illustrated by B. Grey, Early Chinese Pottery and Porcelain, 1953, pl. 72A.

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