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Small Dish with Aquatic Motif
Public Domain

Cizhou kilns

Small Dish with Aquatic Motif

1200-1233

Scroll

Cizhou kilns

Small Dish with Aquatic Motif

1200-1233

Physical Qualities Stoneware with white slip and overglaze red, green, and yellow enamel decoration, 1 5/8 × 6 3/4 in. (4.1 × 17.1 cm.)
Credit Line Julius Levy Memorial Fund
Object Number 1997.29
The Cizhou kilns in northern China were the first to decorate high-fired wares with colorful, lead-fluxed glazes, which are also called enamels. The addition of lead oxide lowered the melting temperature of enamels, which could not survive high temperatures. This dish was covered with slip and transparent glaze before its first firing. It was then decorated with lead glazes, and fired again at a lower temperature—a process similar to that used for the most expensive Tang dynasty (618–907) glazed mortuary wares.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by purchase, 1997; J.J. Lally & Co., New York
Collection installation, "Asia. Artistic Innovation & Exchange", Levy Gallery, Baltimore Museum of Art, October 5, 2023-
Frances Klapthor, 'In the Spotlight,' BMA Today, December-January, 1997-98, ill.

Inscribed: None

Kiln (probably Guantai)

Cizhou kilns

2000–2000

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