
Cleveland Museum of Art
Pair of Leather Bag-Shaped Flasks with Covers
- Date
- 916–1125
- Medium
- earthenware with green glaze
- Culture
- Northeast China, Liao dynasty (916-1125)
- Department
- Chinese Art
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Flasks like these derive their shapes from leather bags; even the edges are finely rouletted to resemble the seams of sewn leather. These were used by the nomadic Khitan people who established the Liao kingdom in Inner Mongolia, Manchuria, and North China. Such wares represented the Liao adoption of the Tang Chinese ceramic tradition, and yet they expressed ethnic identity and new innovations resulted from the cultural borrowing. These earthenware vessels are intentionally made to look like leather storage bags with details that resemble stitching around the spout and handle.
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