
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Ovoid Bottle
China
- Date
- late 12th century
- Medium
- Huairen ware Stoneware with dark-brown glaze and cut-glaze decoration
- Department
- Asian Art
- Institution
- Minneapolis Institute of Art
Probably intended for wine, this ovoid bottle is covered with a nearly black glaze into which a decorative scheme was incised and carved before firing. The dark glaze design elements appear against the light grey ground of the exposed body clay. Commonly known as the cut-glaze technique, this decoration was most likely inspired by the partially glazed brown and white ceramics produced during the Tang dynasty (ninth century) at the Huangbu kilns. The technique was fully developed at a number of Cizhou type kilns during the early Northern Song (960-1127) and it rose to prominence during the Jin period (1115-1234). This particularly fine example with precisely carved floral patterns was made in the Huairen kilns in northern Shanxi province. China, Asia
The authoritative record is held by Minneapolis Institute of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Minneapolis Institute of Art and other institutions.

Bottle
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Globular Bottle
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Ovoid Vase
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Ovoid Jar
Art Institute of Chicago

Vase
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Bottle with Garlic-Head Mouth
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Bottle
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Ovoid covered jar with women and flower pots
Rijksmuseum

Ovoid covered jar with women in a garden
Rijksmuseum

Ovoid covered jar with women in a garden
Rijksmuseum

Ovoid bottle
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Ovoid covered jar with flowering plants and antiquities
Rijksmuseum