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Jardiniere, Dehua ware

Chinese

Artwork Details

Jardiniere, Dehua ware
1644-1912
Chinese
porcelain with glaze
5 x 8 1/16 in. (12.7 x 20.6 cm); ; ; ; ;
Gift of Mrs. Henry Jewett Greene for The Mr. and Mrs. Henry Jewett Greene Memorial Collection
1971/2.88A&B

Description

Subject Matter:

Dehua wares of the period AD 1600–1911 are typified by figures and vessels with a granular sugary white body and either a blue tinged or creamy white glaze. The pure whiteness of these ceramics is due to the relative absence of iron impurities in the body - indeed the clay used contains only half a percent of ferric oxide. Body and glaze fuse perfectly in the firing. Plain white porcelains from the Dehua kilns in Fujian, south-eastern China are known in the West by the nineteenth-century French connoisseurs’ term Blanc de Chine. 
https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/A_PDF-423

Physical Description:

A white cylindrical pot with feet and a brown lid.

Usage Rights:

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