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Bird-shaped bottle
Bird-shaped bottle

Bird-shaped bottle

Place of OriginJapan
Date250-552
PeriodKofun period (250-552)
MaterialsStoneware
DimensionsH. 5 1/8 in x W. 12 in x L. 4 1/2 in, H. 13 cm x W. 30.5 cm x L. 11.4 cm
Credit LineTransfer from the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Gift of Mr. Walter Goodman
Object numberB69P35
DepartmentJapanese Art
ClassificationsCeramics
On View
On view
LocationGallery 25
More Information

Haji and Sue Ceramics in the Kofun period (250–552)

Two ceramic traditions flourished during the Kofun period: Haji ware and Sue ware. Each type was made for both ceremonial and everyday uses, and both have been found within tombs of the period.

Haji ware reflects the continuation of earlier pottery-making traditions. Formed by hand using a coil method similar to earlier Yayoi ceramics, Haji ware is made of a finer clay that enabled the potters to make vessels with thinner walls. Some vessels are covered with an iron-rich mixture of clay and water (slip) that was polished to obtain a rich reddish finish. Haji ware was fired in oxygen-rich atmospheres, at temperatures below 1000° Celsius.

Sue ware is a wheel-thrown stoneware fired at a high temperature using technology introduced from the Korean peninsula, such as tunnel kilns. Its colors, ranging from light gray to black, were produced in a reduction (lowered oxygen) atmosphere by controlling air flow into the kiln’s firing chamber and introducing damp foliage at the end of the firing cycle. Natural glazes on some Sue vessels are the result of wood ash falling on the clay body during firing. This photograph shows an example of a Korean prototype for Sue ware, which can be seen with others in gallery 21.

 

This vessel was first wheel-thrown then modeled by hand. The opposing edges of a shallow, still-pliable bowl were joined to form the bird’s body, leaving pointed ends for a head and tail. The potter used a tool to smooth the seams and model the form, and then attached a separately thrown mouth.