On display
Image of Gallery in South Kensington

Teapot and Lid

ca. 1825 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

‘Purple clay’ teapots from Yixing have long been prized in the belief that they enhance
the aroma of the tea.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.

  • TEAPOT
  • LID
Materials and techniques
Stoneware, thrown, hand-built, carving
Brief description
Teapot and lid, unglazed red stoneware, made by Shao Jingnan, incised with poems, Yixing ware, China, Qing dynasty, ca. 1825
Physical description
Teapot and lid, one of a pair. Teapot of globular form and of the type described in Chinese as having a shui ping (water level): the mouthrim, the tip of the spout and the top of the handle are all flush when the body of the teapot is placed upside down on a flat surface. Domed lid surmounted with a flattened globular knob. Made of finely-potted reddish brown clay, slightly burnished on the outside; the mark where the base section was joined to the body, and some paddle marks inside, are visible. The exterior incised with lines from a poem by the Tang-dynasty poet Du Fu, followed by the name Liupei, the studio name of Shao Jingnan.
Dimensions
  • With lid height: 5.5cm
  • Width: 12.0cm
Style
Marks and inscriptions
  • 遲日江山麗 春風花草香 留佩 (Couplet from poem by Du Fu)
    Transliteration
    Ciri jiangshan li, chunfeng huacao xiang Liupei
  • 邵景南印 (On base)
    Translation
    Seal of Shao Jingnan
    Transliteration
    Shao Jingnan yin
Object history
Bought at £289.90 for the pair [FE.1&A, 1B&C-1984]
Summary
‘Purple clay’ teapots from Yixing have long been prized in the belief that they enhance
the aroma of the tea.
Bibliographic reference
Lo, Guixiang The stonewares of Yixing, London; Hong Kong : New York, NY : Sotheby's Publications; Hong Kong University Press, 1986.
Collection
Accession number
FE.1B&C-1984

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Record createdJanuary 9, 2009
Record URL
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