Ewer thumbnail 1
Ewer thumbnail 2
On display
Image of Gallery in South Kensington

Ewer

317-420 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Although not hailed as a 'classic' ware by ceramic connoisseurs, 'blackware' from Deqing, where this ewer was made, represents an important milestone in the history of Chinese ceramics, for it was from this early southern stoneware that the famous dark-glazed tea bowls of the Song dynasty evolved.

Having accumulated centuries of experience making green-glazed stoneware (see p.24), potters in Deqing, Zhejiang province, tried a new line of products in the fourth century. These were daily utensils such as ewers and bottles, covered with either black or dark brown glazes. Technologically, these black and brown glazes were not difficult to make - all that was required was a higher content of iron. This could be achieved either by using an iron-rich clay in the glaze or by adding concentrated iron oxide to the ash glaze used for greenware.

Dark-glazed ceramics were probably first made in imitation of lacquer, but the matt glaze lacked the glossy appearance of painted lacquer. They were produced in smaller quantities than the popular green-glazed wares. The Southern kilns, including Deqing, introduced several imaginatively modelled shapes, with chicken-headed ewers like this piece, frog-shaped pots and tiger-shaped urinals display a naïve charm never seen before.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Stoneware with black glaze
Brief description
Cer, China, Six Dynasties, high fired and glazed, timeline
Physical description
Stoneware ewer with globular body, short neck and zoomorphic spout, decorated with black glaze
Dimensions
  • Height: 17.5cm
  • Diameter: 14.0cm
Style
Gallery label
(September 2009)
Black-glazed ewer
China, Deqing kilns
Eastern Jin dynasty
(ad 317–420)

The potters in Deqing originally made fine green-glazed stoneware. After 300, they also began to use black and dark-brown glazes, probably inspired by black lacquer. These were the first in China’s long tradition of dark-glazed ceramics. The new colours were achieved by using an iron-rich clay for the glaze, or by adding iron to the glaze mixture already used for the green wares.

Glazed stoneware

Museum no. FE.9-1972
Summary
Although not hailed as a 'classic' ware by ceramic connoisseurs, 'blackware' from Deqing, where this ewer was made, represents an important milestone in the history of Chinese ceramics, for it was from this early southern stoneware that the famous dark-glazed tea bowls of the Song dynasty evolved.

Having accumulated centuries of experience making green-glazed stoneware (see p.24), potters in Deqing, Zhejiang province, tried a new line of products in the fourth century. These were daily utensils such as ewers and bottles, covered with either black or dark brown glazes. Technologically, these black and brown glazes were not difficult to make - all that was required was a higher content of iron. This could be achieved either by using an iron-rich clay in the glaze or by adding concentrated iron oxide to the ash glaze used for greenware.

Dark-glazed ceramics were probably first made in imitation of lacquer, but the matt glaze lacked the glossy appearance of painted lacquer. They were produced in smaller quantities than the popular green-glazed wares. The Southern kilns, including Deqing, introduced several imaginatively modelled shapes, with chicken-headed ewers like this piece, frog-shaped pots and tiger-shaped urinals display a naïve charm never seen before.
Bibliographic reference
Liefkes, Reino and Hilary Young (eds.) Masterpieces of World Ceramics in the Victoria and Albert Museum. London: V&A Publishing, 2008, pp. 28-29.
Collection
Accession number
FE.9-1972

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Record createdSeptember 21, 2006
Record URL
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