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River and Mountains Landscape
The Walters Art Museum
Pilgrim Bottle
The Walters Art Museum
Vase for a Buddhist Altar
The Walters Art Museum
This is an example of fencai enamel decorated porcelain.
Snuff Bottle with Lamps and Garlands
The Walters Art Museum
Snuff Bottle in the Shape of an Archaic Flask
The Walters Art Museum
Vase with Modeled Pomegranate Around the Neck
The Walters Art Museum
This piece is decorated in full relief.
Snuff Bottle with Butterflies and Melon Vine
The Walters Art Museum
Court Official (Tomb Figure)
The Cleveland Museum of Art
Pair of Beaker Vases in Form of Archaic Gu
The Cleveland Museum of Art
Pair of Fantastic Animals
The Cleveland Museum of Art
Pair of Seated Buddhas
The Cleveland Museum of Art
Pair of Bowls
The Cleveland Museum of Art
Pair of Bowls with Sprays of Flowers
The Cleveland Museum of Art
Plate in the Form of a Chrysanthemum
The Cleveland Museum of Art
Center of a Broken Dish with Shou Lao
The Walters Art Museum
This is an example of "famille verte" porcelain; this particular piece is the center of a broken dish featuring Shou Lao, the God of Longevi
Fortification Agate Snuff Bottle
The Walters Art Museum
Large Red Baluster Vase
The Walters Art Museum
Underglaze red and crackled. Upper part is a pale gray-green slightly tinged with pink. Rough unglazed spot on one side of shoulder.
Snuff Bottle with Birds and Flowering Tree
The Walters Art Museum
Vase with Squat Body and Long Neck
The Walters Art Museum
A heavy porcelain vase with underglaze of maroon red (copper), decorated with scrolled sea waves with dragons and other monsters.
Snuff Bottle with Ox Herder Returning Home
The Walters Art Museum
Pilgrim shaped snuff bottle with a mountain landscape and a man riding a bullock (a young steer) on each side. Coral colored stopper and ivory spoon.
Diamond-Shaped Bottle with Neck in the Form of a Small Jar
The Walters Art Museum
Jar with Climbing Floral Designs
The Walters Art Museum
By the late 1600s, groupings of five or seven Chinese porcelain vessels with alternating shapes were often displayed over doors.