A RARE DING PERSIMMON-GLAZED HEXAFOIL BOWL
A RARE DING PERSIMMON-GLAZED HEXAFOIL BOWL
A RARE DING PERSIMMON-GLAZED HEXAFOIL BOWL
A RARE DING PERSIMMON-GLAZED HEXAFOIL BOWL
3 更多
北宋 定窯柿釉葵口盌

NORTHERN SONG DYNASTY (AD 960-1127)

細節
北宋 定窯柿釉葵口盌6 5/8 in. (16.8 cm.) diam., Japanese double wood box
來源
Breitbart伉儷珍藏, 紐約
Breitbart珍藏; 紐約蘇富比, 2014年9月16日, 拍品編號105
藍理捷, 紐約, 編號4837

榮譽呈獻

Margaret Gristina (葛曼琪)
Margaret Gristina (葛曼琪) Senior Specialist, VP

拍品專文

Persimmon glazes were made at several northern Chinese kilns in the Song and early Jin periods, including the Ding and Yaozhou kilns, and were particularly admired on forms associated with the tea ceremony. It is noted in Cao Zhao’s 1388 publication Gegu Yaolun (The Essential Criteria of Antiques) that 'purple' (i.e. persimmon) and black Ding wares were even more expensive than white Ding wares (see Sir Percival David, Chinese Connoisseurship - The Ko Ku Yao Lun, London, 1971, p. 141).

A similar Ding persimmon-glazed bowl, also with a petal-lobed rim, is in the Freer Gallery of Art, illustrated by J. A. Pope, et. al., in The World’s Great Collections: Oriental Ceramics, vol. 9, The Freer Gallery of Art, Washington D.C., Tokyo, 1972, no. 62. Other Ding persimmon-glazed bowls include the example illustrated by S. Kwan, Song Ceramics from the Kwan Collection, Hong Kong, 1994, pp. 82-83, no. 23, and the Ding persimmon-brown glazed bowl of slightly larger size in the Princeton Art Museum illustrated by Z. Kwok, The Eternal Feast: Banqueting in Chinese Art from the 10th to 14th Century, Princeton, 2019, p. 170, no. 41.

A persimmon-glazed bowl of this form found at the Ding kiln site is illustrated in Ding Ware: The World of White Elegance – Recent Archaeological Findings, The Museum of Oriental Ceramics, Osaka, 2013, pp. 162-163, no. 36, where it is dated mid-Northern Song dynasty.

更多來自 藍理捷

查看全部
查看全部