Jar
詳細資料
The meiping shaped jar, with broad round shoulders and narrowed everted foot, is decorated on four sides with composite mystical creatures that combine the head, scales, and flames of a dragon with the body shape, bushy tail, and paws of a lion. Each lion-dragon stands on a rock jutting from crested waves; scrolled clouds swirl overhead in the sky. Buddhist emblems and Taoist Treasures are painted on the neck alternating with cloud scrolls; included are The Conch, The Artemesia Leaf, The Musical Stone, and The Umbrella. The lid, which flares out over the shoulder and is topped with a radish-shaped handle, is painted with a landscape of mountains, trees, a humble hut, and a river where a man fishes. By the late 1600s, groupings of five or seven Chinese porcelain vessels with alternating shapes were often displayed over doors in European homes. A complete set was called a "garniture." This jar, painted with underglaze cobalt blue decoration, is a garniture piece made for export.
William T. Walters, Baltimore [date and mode of acquisition unknown]; inherited by Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1894; by bequest to Walters Art Museum, 1931.
高:17 英吋 (43.2 公分)
陶瓷
釉下彩
underglaze blue