Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Tea Bowl with Indented Lip and Silvery-Brown Hare's-Fur Markings

View through Harvard Museums
The walls of this large yankou wan, or funnel-shaped, tea bowl expand from the small, circular foot, beginning their steep ascent to the lightly indented, vertical lip at an angle approximately one-half inch above the foot. Thin at the rim, the walls thicken as they descend, so the relatively heavy bowl has a low-set center of gravity. Of standard Jian type, the short footring has a flat blottom and straight walls of intermediate thickness; also of standard type, the base is both flat and shallow. Appearing black, a dark brown glaze coats the bowl inside and out, excluding the foot and base. Although the angled change of profile arrested its flow on one side, the glaze ran to the foot in two thick tears on the other; the thick welt at the glaze's lower edge is thus irregulary configured. Denser at the mouth, a pattern of silvery brown hare's-fur markings extends to the glaze edge on the exterior and to the small, circular, lightly tilted floor on the interior. The exposed body clay on the bowl's lower eterior assumed a dark purplish brown skin in firing. The bowl was turned on the potter's wheel, after which its foot and base were shaped with a knife. Following a period of drying, the bowl was dipped in the glaze slurry; once it had dried again, its lip was immersed in an iron-bearing slip, which caused the hare's-fur streaks to form in the kiln. The bowl was fired right side up in its saggar, seated on a clay firing cushion.
Department of Asian Art J.J. Lally & Co. New York (dealer) (2007) Diane H. Schafer Collection New York (acquired in the late 1980s or early 1990s) James Bradford Godfrey New York (dealer) (late 1980s or early 1990s) Mrs. Agnes Hellner Collection Stockholm Sweden (widow or daughter of J. Hellner) (1980s) J. Hellner Collection Stockholm Sweden (acquired in the 1950s or 1960s) Probably from an old Japanese collection as indicated by the metal rim and by the bowl's mid-twentieth-century entry into a European collection Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum Purchase through the generosity of Leonard P. Braus Alan J. and Suzanne W. Dworsky Thomas M.T. and Catherine S.K. Fok Mark Gaston Dorothy T. Goldman and David M. Leventhal and Bequest of Edmund C.C. Lin by exchange
image-zoom
Title: Tea Bowl with Indented Lip and Silvery-Brown Hare's-Fur Markings
Description:
The walls of this large yankou wan, or funnel-shaped, tea bowl expand from the small, circular foot, beginning their steep ascent to the lightly indented, vertical lip at an angle approximately one-half inch above the foot.
Thin at the rim, the walls thicken as they descend, so the relatively heavy bowl has a low-set center of gravity.
Of standard Jian type, the short footring has a flat blottom and straight walls of intermediate thickness; also of standard type, the base is both flat and shallow.
Appearing black, a dark brown glaze coats the bowl inside and out, excluding the foot and base.
Although the angled change of profile arrested its flow on one side, the glaze ran to the foot in two thick tears on the other; the thick welt at the glaze's lower edge is thus irregulary configured.
Denser at the mouth, a pattern of silvery brown hare's-fur markings extends to the glaze edge on the exterior and to the small, circular, lightly tilted floor on the interior.
The exposed body clay on the bowl's lower eterior assumed a dark purplish brown skin in firing.
The bowl was turned on the potter's wheel, after which its foot and base were shaped with a knife.
Following a period of drying, the bowl was dipped in the glaze slurry; once it had dried again, its lip was immersed in an iron-bearing slip, which caused the hare's-fur streaks to form in the kiln.
The bowl was fired right side up in its saggar, seated on a clay firing cushion.

Related Results

Album of Drawings
Album of Drawings
1) Pen and brown ink brush and gray wash. 2) Pen and brown ink over black chalk. 3) 4) Black chalk. 5) Pen and brown ink over black chalk. 6) Pen and br...
Small Tea Bowl with Rounded Sides and Russet Hare's Fur Markings
Small Tea Bowl with Rounded Sides and Russet Hare's Fur Markings
This small tea bowl has rounded sides that rise from its small, circular footring to its circular lip, which is subtly indented just below the top. The bowl's walls are relatively ...
Tea Bowl with Russet Hare's Fur Markings
Tea Bowl with Russet Hare's Fur Markings
The small, circular foot and lightly indented, vertical lip of this large yankou wan, or funnel-shaped bowl, are connected by steeply sloping walls that show a well defined, angula...
Small Covered Bowl with Tortoiseshell Glaze
Small Covered Bowl with Tortoiseshell Glaze
This two-piece set includes a U-shaped bowl and a flat cover with a tiny, pierced, strap handle at the indented heart of the cover's lightly swollen center. The bowl's thin walls e...

Back to Top