A BUNCHEONG INCISED STONEWARE BOTTLE
A BUNCHEONG INCISED STONEWARE BOTTLE
A BUNCHEONG INCISED STONEWARE BOTTLE
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A BUNCHEONG INCISED STONEWARE BOTTLE
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A BUNCHEONG INCISED STONEWARE BOTTLE

JOSEON DYNASTY (15TH-16TH CENTURY)

Details
A BUNCHEONG INCISED STONEWARE BOTTLE
JOSEON DYNASTY (15TH-16TH CENTURY)
Of ovoid form with tapered cylindrical neck ending in a wide rolled lip, brushed with white slip and decorated with incised panel of mythical sea creatures and seaweed, neck with a collar of overlapping leaves, covered by a clear celadon glaze
11 ¼ in. (28.6 cm.)

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Takaaki Murakami (村上高明)
Takaaki Murakami (村上高明) Vice President, Specialist and Head of Department | Korean Art

Lot Essay

Brushed slip and sgraffito carving are associated with the kilns of Cholla province in the southwest. The underglaze white slip is thickly applied over the heavily potted body and the design incised in relief to the ground, a contrasting grayish-green when the vessel is fired. The overglaze is thin and transparent with a faint greenish cast which can be more pronounced, as in this example, where the glaze is more thickly applied. These buncheong (literally, "powder green") wares signaled a robust new era of ceramic design. The boldness of conception and spontaneity of these carved patterns has been admired consistently in Korea and Japan and in the West since the turn of the twentieth century.
For similar vessels see Byung-chang Rhee, Masterpieces of Korean Art--Yi Ceramics (Tokyo: privately published, 1978), no. 37.

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