Lot Essay
This shallow dish, with its dark body and delicately crackled glaze exemplifies the sophisticated elegance of wares made at southern Chinese kilns. The Five Great Song Dynasty Wares are traditionally Guan, Ge, Ding, Jun and Ru. Each of these wares has its own characteristics, and in the case of Guan and Ge wares the simple forms combined with a rich blue-grey crackled glaze produce ceramics of deceptively simple beauty.
A Guan dish of larger size (16 cm.) and similar shape, with short foot and steeply flared sides, although fired on spurs, is in the collection of the National Palace Museum, illustrated in Kuan Ware of the Southern Song Dynasty, Book 1, Part II, Hong Kong, 1962, p. 150, pls. 59 and 59a. Another dish of larger size (22 cm.), although of more shallow form and with more steeply flared sides, also in the National Palace Museum, is illustrated in the exhibition catalogue, Special Exhibition of Sung Dynasty Kuan Ware, Taipei, 1989, p. 98.
A Guan dish of larger size (16 cm.) and similar shape, with short foot and steeply flared sides, although fired on spurs, is in the collection of the National Palace Museum, illustrated in Kuan Ware of the Southern Song Dynasty, Book 1, Part II, Hong Kong, 1962, p. 150, pls. 59 and 59a. Another dish of larger size (22 cm.), although of more shallow form and with more steeply flared sides, also in the National Palace Museum, is illustrated in the exhibition catalogue, Special Exhibition of Sung Dynasty Kuan Ware, Taipei, 1989, p. 98.