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Hexagonal vase with molded animal-head handles
Hexagonal vase with molded animal-head handles

Hexagonal vase with molded animal-head handles

Place of OriginChina
Date-1500, approx. 1200-1500
DynastySouthern Song period (1127-1279)
MaterialsPorcelain and olive-green glaze
DimensionsH. 9 3/8 in x W. 5 5/8 in x D. 5 1/8 in, H. 23.9 cm x W. 14.3 cm x D. 13.1 cm
Credit LineThe Avery Brundage Collection
Object numberB60P2378
DepartmentChinese Art
ClassificationsCeramics
On View
Not on view
More Information
This classical shape presents devices designed originally for bronzes, such as the built-in rings on each side and the openings in the foot. Related to the previous vase (cat. no. 277), it was also produced during the peak period of the longquan kilns with considerable attention to the harmony of shape and to the bronze-green quality of the glaze. A work of the same shape with molded relief decoration on the body unearthed from a 1276 tomb in Lishui, where kilns prospered at the time, provides a time frame for its production(Zhejiang Light Industry Bureau 1989: pl. 7, fig. 4). Increasingly copied by Yuan potters, vases with ringed handles were later modified to a form with a more rounded body.