Teapot

Minneapolis Institute of Art

Teapot

Hsu Shun-fang

Date
c. 1800
Medium
I-hsing stoneware with slip-painted décor
Department
Asian Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

The shape of this elegant teapot is unique to I-hsing pottery and is likely inspired by the square fang hu storage vessels of the Han dynasty (206 b.c.-a.d. 220). The teapot is decorated with a solitary fisherman standing on rocks from which trees grow next to a pavilion. There are mountains in the far distance. This pictorial scene of nature, undoubtedly inspired by ink landscape paintings, would have appealed directly to scholars who became the chief patrons of I-hsing ware during the early Ch'ing period. The recessed base bears an impressed six-character seal-script mark which reads Made by Hsu Shun-fang of Ching-ch'i. Ching-ch'i is the old name for I-hsing, the famous kiln site in Kiangsu province that specialized in scholar's taste ceramics. China, Asia

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