Reliquary Jar in the Shape of a Stupa

Minneapolis Institute of Art

Reliquary Jar in the Shape of a Stupa

China

Date
6th century
Medium
Yue ware, porcelaneous stoneware with incised and applied decor under a celadon glaze
Department
Asian Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

This unusual, lidded jar appears to simulate a round storehouse with a highly stylized roof. It is likely that the vessel functioned as a container for the ashes of a Buddhist monk. Although the Daoist and Confucian custom was to bury the dead, Buddhists also practiced cremation. This reliquary would have been placed inside a temple or pagoda. Studded, fortified doors are incised prominently on the vessel wall. Evenly spaced wooden columns flank these with incised tendril patterns between them. The removable cover is quite fanciful. With scalloped eaves and a bulb-like knob, the roof shape is that of a Chinese-style Buddhist stupa. The hard, high-fired body and celadon glaze (yue ware) suggests the work was made in the south, probably in Jiangxi province. China, Asia

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