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A mallet-shaped vase

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A olive-green glazed jar

A olive-green glazed jar
This splendid jar is a mingqi, an object made especially for burial with the dead, and was used...

A mallet-shaped vase

A mallet-shaped vase
To connoisseurs of Chinese ceramics, the word celadon brings to mind first and foremost the...

A dish for the Scottish market

A dish for the Scottish market
This beautifully drawn flower basket derives from an untraced engraving after Jean-Baptiste...
Southern Song dynasty (1127-1279), 12th - 13th century; Longquan ware
Porcelaneous stoneware with relief decoration under celadon glaze
H. 6 3/4 in. (17.1 cm)

To connoisseurs of Chinese ceramics, the word celadon brings to mind first and foremost the luscious glazes of the porcelaneous stonewares that were produced in the Longquan kilns of Zhejiang Province during the Southern Song period. These wares are the triumphant conclusion of a tradition of high-fired green glazes that began in the Shang dynasty (ca. 1600-1050 b.c.) - glazes that were corrected and improved upon through the centuries as though countless generations of potters were all striving toward the common ultimate goal of a glaze such as this. The form of this mallet-shaped vase has been simplified in the interests of a jadelike glaze that almost begs to be touched. Its streamlined shape is underscored by the contrast of two crisply molded fish that serve as handles.

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