Water Dropper thumbnail 1
Water Dropper thumbnail 2
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On display
Image of Gallery in South Kensington

Water Dropper

ca. 1725 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This small water droppper was probably used by expatriate Chinese communities living in South Asia. It is an essential accessory for writing in the traditional Chinese style with brushes and ink. Hard cakes of solid ink were ground by hand, on an ink stone with a few drops of water to make an ink solution.

This water droppper is one of a number of objects that was salvaged from the wreck of a trade ship thought to be a Chinese junk, dating to approximately 1725. This corresponds to the reign of the Kangxi emperor (1662-1722) of the Qing dynasty (1644-1911). The wreck was discovered off the Southern coast of Vietnam in 1998 near Ca Mau and is now commonly referred to as the Ca Mau wreck. The ship was loaded with Chinese porcelain of various designs for export to South Asia and Europe. This object is one of a group of 182 pieces of porcelain acquired by the V&A from this wreck.

Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Ceramic, fired and glazed
Brief description
Water dropper in the form of a toad
Physical description
Modelled as a toad with applied features and white nodules all over the outer surface. There is a small aperture in the toad's back in which to pour water.
Dimensions
  • Length: 7.5cm
  • Height: 5cm
Styles
Production typeMass produced
Gallery label
(21/11/2008)
Toad-shaped water droppers
China, Jingdezhen, about 1725, biscuit porcelain

Droppers and brush rests were used in calligraphy.

Museum nos. FE.17, 18-2007
Object history
This object was salvaged from the wreck of a trade ship, probably a Chinese junk dating to approximately 1725. This date corresponds to the reign of the Yongzheng emperor (1723-1735) of the Qing dynasty (1644-1911). The wreck was discovered off the Southern coast of Vietnam in 1998 near Ca Mau. The wreck is now commonly referred to as the Ca Mau wreck. By 1999 a total of 51,500 pieces had been recovered form the wreck.

It was loaded with Chinese porcelain of various designs for export to South Asia and Europe. This object is one of a group of 182 pieces of porcelain acquired by the V&A from this wreck. These objects were sold through Sotheby's, Amsterdam at sale AM0967 'Made in Imperial China: 76,000 pieces of export porcelain from the Ca Mau shipwreck, Circa 1725' which took place in 2007.

Historical significance: This object provides useful information about trade, trade routes, design and markets for Chinese ceramics.
Subjects depicted
Summary
This small water droppper was probably used by expatriate Chinese communities living in South Asia. It is an essential accessory for writing in the traditional Chinese style with brushes and ink. Hard cakes of solid ink were ground by hand, on an ink stone with a few drops of water to make an ink solution.

This water droppper is one of a number of objects that was salvaged from the wreck of a trade ship thought to be a Chinese junk, dating to approximately 1725. This corresponds to the reign of the Kangxi emperor (1662-1722) of the Qing dynasty (1644-1911). The wreck was discovered off the Southern coast of Vietnam in 1998 near Ca Mau and is now commonly referred to as the Ca Mau wreck. The ship was loaded with Chinese porcelain of various designs for export to South Asia and Europe. This object is one of a group of 182 pieces of porcelain acquired by the V&A from this wreck.
Collection
Accession number
FE.18-2007

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Record createdJanuary 13, 2009
Record URL
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