Jar with dish-shaped mouth
Place of OriginEastern China or Southeastern China
DynastyWestern Han period (206 BCE-9 CE)
MaterialsHigh-fired gray ceramic with grooved bands and cord decoration
DimensionsH. 11 in x W. 9 in x Diam. 9 3/4 in, H. 27.9 cm x W. 22.9 cm x Diam. 24.8 cm
Credit LineThe Avery Brundage Collection
Object numberB60P1820
DepartmentChinese Art
ClassificationsCeramics
On View
Not on viewAccording to the original documentation, this piece was found by Mr. John L. Mickalls in 1904 in Shandong province. The earthenware jar with a flaring mouth and punched cord design was a variant of an earlier form made during the Shang-Zhou period. The vessel commands attention with its dish-shaped mouth and its combination of two types of decoration—grooved bands and impressed cord designs—which were not used together until the Han period. The tendency of potters to mix these two decorative elements was firmly established in the Western Han, as this and other specimens found in Shandong have substantiated (WW 1988.10: 74, figs. 4, 5).
approx. 1000-800 BCE
approx. 100 BCE-100 CE
900-1000
approx. 1200-1050 BCE
approx. 1300-1050 BCE
approx. 1300-1050 BCE
approx. 1200-1300
approx. 1300-1500