Coco Li
Sale Coordinator, Chinese Works of Art
Sold for US$21,675 inc. premium
Our Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.
Find your local specialistSale Coordinator, Chinese Works of Art
Global Head, Business Strategy, Chinese Paintings
Vice President and Head of Department
Senior Specialist
Global Head, Chinese Paintings and Calligraphy
Junior Specialist/Cataloguer
東周戰國時期 珍稀大件原始瓷透雕天球瓶
From the late Warring States period through the Han dynasty (206 BCE – CE 220), glazed stoneware vessels of this type, produced in northern Zhejiang and southern Jiangsu provinces, presumably for burial, appear to follow quite closely bronze prototypes, and are frequently decorated in an overall impressed pattern, often with a combination of incised lines, raised bands and cog-like ribbing.
It has been noted (see https://kimbellart.org/collection/ap-199508) that the attractive olive-green ash glaze, more usually found on the upper two-thirds of such vessels, was probably produced by sifting dry wood-ash, or a mixture of dry clay and ash, over the damp pots before firing. These proto-porcelaneous wares are the predecessors of the finer kaolin-clay, high-fire wares developed toward the end of the Tang dynasty in the 7th and 8th centuries CE. The Kimbell Museum of Art website, listed above, also illustrates a smaller jar with very similar cog-like ribbed bands, accession no. AP 1995.08.
The result of Hong Kong Authentication thermoluminescence test is consistent with the dating of this lot.