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Covered box with a knob and alternating panels of vegetal scrolls and lattices

Thai

Artwork Details

Covered box with a knob and alternating panels of vegetal scrolls and lattices
circa 15th centrury
Thai
stoneware with underglaze iron decoration and clear glaze
3 3/4 x 3 15/16 x 3 15/16 in. (9.5 x 9.9 x 10 cm);3 3/4 x 3 15/16 x 3 15/16 in. (9.5 x 9.9 x 10 cm);2 3/8 x 3 15/16 x 3 15/16 in. (6 x 9.9 x 10 cm);1 1/2 x 3 15/16 x 3 15/16 in. (3.8 x 9.9 x 10 cm)
Gift of the Marvin Felheim Collection
1983/1.432A&B

Description

March 28, 2009
These small covered boxes were created in kilns at Sawankhalok, the largest ceramic production site in Thailand. It is situated by the Yom River, which provides easy access to the port for the Southeast Asian island trade. From the thirteenth to sixteenth centuries, Sawankhalok was the major competitor to the kilns in Vietnam and Southern China. While Vietnam successfully produced inexpensive copies of Chinese blue underglazed porcelains, Thai kilns adopted the Chinese designs but used iron (which results in a brown color) in place of cobalt oxide for underglazing. Though this covered box with leaf scroll and lattice design shares the sensibility of Chinese and Vietnamese blue-underglaze wares, the brown color gives it a rustic feeling.
Covered boxes were used as burial objects to accompany the dead and were also objects of status and wealth, for the local kilns only produced less durable and inexpensive earthernwares.
(Label for UMMA South and Southest Asia Gallery Opening Rotation, March 2009)

Subject Matter:

Covered boxes were used as burial objects to accompany the dead. This practice for the care of deceased people in afterlife preceded the succession of foreign religious influence from Buddhism, Hinduism to Islam. The stoneware trade ceramics were also objects of status and wealth, for the local kilns only produced less durable and inexpensive earthernwares. The round shape with a handle, and some of the design motifs were adopted from stone and metal reliquaries and architectural elements came with Indian Hinduism and Buddhism.

Physical Description:

Small-size covered box, the lotus bud handle and surrounding medallion in brown, the body and lid with alternating panels of vegetal scrolls and lattices. Each panel is separated by a raised line. The foot is painted brown. Clear glaze.

Usage Rights:

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