Page 39 - Christie's Mineo Hata Collection Sept. 21, 2023
P. 39

ⱷ861

 A CIZHOU-TYPE 'OIL SPOT' TEA BOWL  金ǎ⌘州⒋系油滴釉盞
 JIN DYNASTY, 12TH-13TH CENTURY
 Ϝ源
 The tea bowl is covered inside and out with a blackish-brown glaze suffused with   秦峰⁸珍藏
 神戶
 日本
 silvery 'oil spots' that falls in a thick line on the exterior above the dark brown wash
 covering the lower body.
 4º in. (10.9 cm.) diam., silk pouch, Japanese wood box
 $20,000-30,000


 PROVENANCE:
 Mineo Hata Collection, Kobe, Japan.


 Cizhou-type ‘oil spot’ tea bowls from the Jin dynasty are very rare. ‘Oil spot’
 glazes were invented at the Jian kilns in Fujian province in the Southern Song
 th
 dynasty, but black wares were made as early as the 10 century in the late Five
 Dynasties-early Northern Song period. Cizhou examples of ‘oil spot’ tea bowls
 show the influence of these Jian examples in both shape and glaze.

 A nearly identical Jin dynasty Cizhou-type ‘oil spot’ tea bowl from the
 Scheinman Collection is illustrated by R. Mowry in Hare’s Fur, Tortoiseshell, and
 Partridge Feathers, Cambridge, 1996, pp. 157-58, no. 50. See, also, an example
 dated to the Yuan dynasty, excavated from Tuchengzi site, Wulanchabu city,
 and currently in the Inner Mongolia Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology,
 illustrated in Zhongguo chutu ciqi quanji (Complete Collection of Ceramic Art
 Unearthed in China), vol. 4, no. 193, which has slightly larger oil spots than the
 present bowl.


























 (with box)


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