
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Waste Vessel (ch'a-tou)
China
- Date
- 9th century
- Medium
- Yue ware Porcelaneous stoneware with celadon glaze
- Department
- Asian Art
- Institution
- Minneapolis Institute of Art
The uniquely shaped ch'a-tou with its exceptionally wide mouth is a type of waste receptacle that may have also functioned as a spittoon. Its shape evolved from Tang dynasty (610-906) silver vessels and examples have survived in a variety of glazes including yueh celadon, white, black, and ching-pai (shadow blue). The form appears to have been most popular during Tang (618-906) and Northern Song (960-1127). This is the period when tea drinking became popular in China suggesting that this unusual type of vessel may have served as a waste receptacle for tea dregs. Asia
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