A BUNCHEONG SLIP-DECORATED STONEWARE BOTTLE
A BUNCHEONG SLIP-DECORATED STONEWARE BOTTLE
A BUNCHEONG SLIP-DECORATED STONEWARE BOTTLE
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A BUNCHEONG SLIP-DECORATED STONEWARE BOTTLE
6 More
A BUNCHEONG SLIP-DECORATED STONEWARE BOTTLE

JOSEON DYNASTY (15TH CENTURY)

Details
A BUNCHEONG SLIP-DECORATED STONEWARE BOTTLE
JOSEON DYNASTY (15TH CENTURY)
Of ovoid form with tapered cylindrical neck ending in a wide rolled lip, decorated with white slip of fish and seaweed in a wide band, neck with a collar of overlapping leaves, covered by a clear celadon glaze
11 7/8 in. (30.2 cm.)
Provenance
Shirakiya Department Store
Exhibited
Exhibition held by Nihon toji kyokai Osaka shibu (Japan Assocation of Ceramics, Osaka Branch)

Brought to you by

Takaaki Murakami (村上高明)
Takaaki Murakami (村上高明) Vice President, Specialist and Head of Department | Korean Art

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Lot Essay

Buncheong, literally meaning "powder green," is a stoneware brushed or inlaid, as here, with white slip, liquid clay. A robust new era of ceramic design was ushered in by the early Joseon potters. It is typical of Joseon stoneware that the coarse clay body is heavily potted, here in pleasing contrast with the intricate inlay. The overglaze is thin and transparent with a greenish cast and satin sheen. The boldness of conception and spontaneity of these inlaid patterns has been admired consistently in Korea and Japan and in the West since the turn of the twentieth century.

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