A HENAN BLACK-GLAZED SAUCER-DISH
Jin Dynasty
Jin Dynasty
The wide shallow dish with gently rounded sides, covered in a lustrous thick black glaze, thinning at the rim to russet tones and pooling irregularly around the exterior, the base unglazed revealing the pale buff-stoneware body. 13.6cm (5 3/8in) diam.
金 河南窯黑釉小盤
Notable for its lustrous dark glaze, the present dish is a refined example of wares produced at numerous kilns in Henan Province.
Dark-glazed, high-fired ceramic vessels were highly regarded as solid, practical wares. Their production began during the Tang dynasty and rapidly spread throughout China. The development of black wares during the Northern Song period appears to have been inspired by contemporaneous plain lacquerware, and different kilns developed their own styles.
Compare with a related black-glazed dish, Jin dynasty, from the British Museum, London, acc.no.1911,1025.14.
View it on
Estimate
Time, Location
Auction House
Jin Dynasty
Jin Dynasty
The wide shallow dish with gently rounded sides, covered in a lustrous thick black glaze, thinning at the rim to russet tones and pooling irregularly around the exterior, the base unglazed revealing the pale buff-stoneware body. 13.6cm (5 3/8in) diam.
金 河南窯黑釉小盤
Notable for its lustrous dark glaze, the present dish is a refined example of wares produced at numerous kilns in Henan Province.
Dark-glazed, high-fired ceramic vessels were highly regarded as solid, practical wares. Their production began during the Tang dynasty and rapidly spread throughout China. The development of black wares during the Northern Song period appears to have been inspired by contemporaneous plain lacquerware, and different kilns developed their own styles.
Compare with a related black-glazed dish, Jin dynasty, from the British Museum, London, acc.no.1911,1025.14.