Jar with short neck
Place of OriginZhejiang province, China
DynastyEastern Han period (25-220)
MaterialsGray high-fired earthenware with grooved and impressed decoration and light-gray glaze
DimensionsH. 11 3/4 in x Diam. 12 1/2 in, H. 30 cm x Diam. 32 cm
Credit LineThe Avery Brundage Collection
Object numberB63P24+
DepartmentChinese Art
ClassificationsCeramics
On View
Not on viewAdapted from bronze prototypes, the lei, a tall ceramic jar with a proportionally small mouth, was introduced by southern potters in the Eastern Zhou period. Kilns in the area of Zhejiang tried out a new type using ash glaze with stamping designs based on long-existing techniques of high-fired earthenware. Unglazed and glazed lei jars in various qualities of clay, stamped with geometric patterns including the comb design, have been unearthed from tombs of the Warring States period through the Han dynasty in Zhejiang. A glazed lei of hard texture, from a tomb dating to 109, verifies their production in Zhejiang during the middle Eastern Han (WW 1983.6: 40-44).
approx. 198
approx. 300-100 BCE
approx. 1300-1050 BCE
approx. 1000-800 BCE