A VERY RARE WHITE-GLAZED MEIPING
A VERY RARE WHITE-GLAZED MEIPING
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日本顯赫私人珍藏
元 白釉梅瓶

YUAN DYNASTY (1279-1368)

細節
元 白釉梅瓶
13 in. (33.1 cm.) high, Japanese wood box
來源
井上恆一 (1906-1965) 珍藏
繭山龍泉堂,日本,1965年12月
出版
繭山龍泉堂,《龍泉集芳》,上冊,東京,1976年,頁228,編號685
展覽
東京,五島美術館,「中国陶磁名宝展 第五回」,1966年

榮譽呈獻

Rufus Chen (陳嘉安)
Rufus Chen (陳嘉安) Head of Sale, AVP, Specialist

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拍品專文

Amongst the most iconic of the large forms seen in Yuan dynasty porcelain is the tall meiping (literally ‘prunus vase’) with elegant tapering shoulders, exemplified by the current vessel. In addition to being used to display plum blossoms and other flowers, such vessels were also used for wine and other beverages.

It is exceptionally rare to find a Yuan meiping completely covered in a white glaze, rather than decorated with underglaze cobalt blue. The thick opaque white glaze may be categorized as luanbai (egg-white), for its goose-egg-like appearance. In her discussion of a Yuan ewer covered with a luanbai glaze illustrated in Serene Pleasure: The Jinglexuan Collection of Chinese Ceramics, Seattle, 2001, p. 40, no. 17, Rosemary E. Scott notes the glaze "was developed around the 1320s, in the mid-Yuan period. The opaque white is achieved by deliberately decreasing the amount of calcium oxide added to the glaze in the form of ash…Lower calcium oxide content means that many quartz particles remain undissolved and suspended in the glaze, resulting in the opaque effect. Also contributing to this effect are the minute gas bubbles retained in the thick glaze and the crystals that formed during the cooling. They together make the opaque luanbai glaze creamy and white."

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