A XING GREEN SPLASH-GLAZED EWER AND A 'PHOENIX' COVER
A XING GREEN SPLASH-GLAZED EWER AND A 'PHOENIX' COVER

TANG DYNASTY (618-907)

Details
A XING GREEN SPLASH-GLAZED EWER AND A 'PHOENIX' COVER
TANG DYNASTY (618-907)
The ewer has an ovoid-shaped body with a raised central ridge, supported on a tall spreading foot with a flattened knob in between, the long neck with dish-shaped mouth is applied with a double-strand handle, the cover is moulded as a phoenix's head with incised plumage, all splashed with green glaze on a white slip ground.
16 3/4 in. (42 cm.) high overall, box
Provenance
Collection of Masuda Takashi (1848-1938), a renowned Japanese entrepreneur, acquired during the late Meiji to early Showa period
A Japanese private collection, acquired in the 1990s

Brought to you by

Chi Fan Tsang
Chi Fan Tsang

Lot Essay

A green splash-glazed ewer of similar form but with a cover in the form of a dragon’s head was found in a Tang dynasty cargo recovered from the Java Sea southeast of Singapore in 1998 and is now housed in the Asian Civilizations Museum, Singapore, illustrated and discussed by Rosemary Scott,‘A Remarkable Tang Dynasty Cargo’, Transactions of the Oriental Ceramic Society, vol. 67, 2002-2003, pp. 13-26. According to the Asian Civilizations Museum, this cargo can be dated to around AD 830s.

More from The Pavilion Sale - Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art

View All
View All