A BAISHE 'MOON AND PRUNUS’ CONICAL TEA BOWL
A BAISHE 'MOON AND PRUNUS’ CONICAL TEA BOWL
A BAISHE 'MOON AND PRUNUS’ CONICAL TEA BOWL
2 More
A BAISHE `MOON AND PRUNUS’ CONICAL TEA BOWL

SONG DYNASTY (AD 960-1279)

Details
A BAISHE 'MOON AND PRUNUS’ CONICAL TEA BOWL
SONG DYNASTY (AD 960-1279)
The bowl is carved through the pale milky-blue glaze on the interior with a blossoming prunus spray and a crescent moon. The details and the interior rim edge are painted in a reddish-brown slip and the recessed unglazed base is inscribed in black ink with the character hai (sea).
4 1/2 in. (11.4 cm.) diam., cloth box
Provenance
J. J. Lally & Co., New York, no. 4902.

Brought to you by

Margaret Gristina (葛曼琪)
Margaret Gristina (葛曼琪) Senior Specialist, VP

Lot Essay

A bowl of the same form and design is illustrated by R. Krahl in Chinese Ceramics from the Meiyintang Collection, vol. 1, London, 1994, p. 278, no. 515, where it is noted that similar wares with a light blue qingbai glaze applied over a slip have been excavated at the Baishe kilns in Nanfeng county, Jiangxi province. A similar small conical bowl excavated at Baishe is illustrated in Kaogu, 1985, No. 3, pl. 6: 1 & 2, and in a line drawing on p. 226, fig. 4:1. Another very similar Baishe ‘moon and prunus’ tea bowl from the Turner Collection, now in the Columbia Museum of Art, Columbia, North Carolina, is illustrated in Eye to the East: The Turner Collection of Chinese Art, Columbia, 2008, p. 64.

This motif is also found on white stoneware boxes and covers made at the nearby Jizhou kilns, such as the example illustrated by R. Krahl in Chinese Ceramics from the Meiyintang Collection, vol. 1, London, 1994, p. 279, no. 517, and another from the Falk Collection, sold at Christie's New York, 16 October 2001, lot 96.

More from J. J. Lally & Co.

View All
View All