J.J. Lally & Co., Oriental Art / New York City, New York

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Past Exhibition

Chinese Ceramics in Black and White

March 20–April 10, 2010

16.
A WHITE PORCELAIN MELON-SHAPED EWER

Liao Dynasty, A.D. 10th–11th Century

of bulbous form with steeply rounded sides divided into six shallow lobes and surmounted by an arching ropetwist handle rising from an applied monster mask to extend over the center of the ewer, the thick strands of the handle entwined with three smaller strands extending forward and out to the sides, each terminating in a moulded triangular foliate appliqué, the rounded shoulders of the vessel studded with small stylized florettes and the circular mouth in the center of the vessel partially covered with a moulded appliqué in the form of a frog, the short upward-curving spout also applied with a monster mask, all covered with a clear glaze stopping just short of the wide ring foot and continuing over the recessed base, the footrim left unglazed revealing the fine white porcelaneous body, with some kiln grit from firing at the edges of the foot.

Height 5 inches (12.7 cm)
Width over handle 412 inches (11.5 cm)

Compare the white porcelain ewer of similar shape with the same twisted handle with three trefoil leaf-shaped terminals unearthed in 1981 from a Liao dynasty tomb at Haoqianyingzi, Qayouqian qi, Ulanqab Meng, Inner Mongolia, included in the travelling exhibition from China which was shown at several museums in Japan, illustrated in the catalogue Chugoku Naimōko-hoppō kiba minzoku bunbutsuten (Chinese Inner Mongolia Art of the Horsemen of the North), Tokyo, 1983, p. 75, no. 74. The same piece is illustrated in Zhongguo wenwu jinghua daquan: Taocijuan (Compendium of Chinese Archaeological Treasures: Ceramics), Hong Kong, 1993, p. 314, no. 499.

Another melon-shaped white porcelain ewer of less elaborate form is illustrated by Krahl in Chinese Ceramics from the Meiyintang Collection, Volume One, London, 1994, p. 197, no. 343, where the author cites another white porcelain ewer with similar stylized handle decorated with floral appliqués on the body excavated in 1972 from a Liao dynasty tomb in Nanlinzi, Liaoyang city, Liaoning province, illustrated in Wenwu, 1981, No. 8, pl. 7, no. 7.

Compare also the ewer with a plain strap handle in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, published in Illustrated Catalogue of Sung Dynasty Porcelain in the National Palace Museum: Ting Ware and Ting-type Ware, Taipei, 1973, no. 6.

遼    白瓷瓜形提樑壺    高 12.7 厘米    寬 11.5 厘米