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Chapter 07 (pp. 330-385)_Layout 1  7/7/10  5:42 PM  Page 344

















































                               7.18. Cizhou ware jar with white slip under clear, colorless glaze and polychrome overglaze decoration, early
                               fourteenth century, 31.1 cm x 33.7 cm, 20 cm mouth diameter. Saint Louis Art Museum.





                      porcelain shards and kiln implements, findings that con-  (1115–1234) and Yuan dynasties. A jar with a transparent
                      firmed the efflorescence of Cizhou production at this site  glaze excavated from the Jin dynasty imperial tomb com-
                      during the Yuan. 51                                  plex is considered a prime example of Jin dynasty Cizhou
                                                                                     54
                        Several decorative techniques now associated with the  production. During the Yuan dynasty, the major Cizhou
                      Yuan  era  were  invented  or  perfected  in  these  Cizhou  complexes were located at Fengcheng (near the city of
                      kilns. The stoneware created there was embellished with  Handan) and Guantai (in Cihu county), both in Hebei
                      overglaze or underglaze as well as incised and carved de-  province.  Other  Yuan  dynasty  Cizhou  kiln  sites  have
                      signs (Figs. 7.18, 7.19, 7.20, 7.21, 7.22). In fact, overglaze  been excavated in Tangyin and Yu counties in present-
                      enamel wares decorated with iron red and copper green  day Henan province, in the city of Yangquan in Shanxi
                      were first produced by this family of kilns (see Fig. 7.18).  province,  and  in  Lingwu  county  of  the  Ningxia  au-
                      This overglaze enamel technique was ultimately adopted  tonomous region.
                      by  Yuan  potters  at  Jingdezhen  where  use  of  low-fired  The Jingdezhen kilns were also producing at this time,
                      overglaze enamels developed during the early Ming pe-  and  competed  with  the  Yuan  Cizhou  kilns  for  market
                      riod  at  the  imperial  kilns  and  private  kilns. 52  In  the  share. The Cizhou potters responded to the competition
                      eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth centuries the theme of  by making their production more efficient and economi-
                      boys playing had been popular in a wide range of ceram-  cal. In the previous Song and Jin periods, for example,
                      ics (Fig. 7.23). And this motif continued to be popular  potters covered vessels with white slip, then black slip,
                      during the fourteenth century not only on ceramics, in-  incising the black layer to expose the white layer before
                      cluding Cizhou ware, but also in textiles and paintings. 53  coating with transparent glaze. During the Yuan dynasty,
                      Underglazed iron brown wares with peacock blue glazes,  this process was simplified by cutting through one layer
                      as well as brown- or black-glazed wares now known as  of brown glaze to expose a beige clay body before firing;
                      “Cizhou  type,”  became  popular  during  the  Jin  dynasty  as seen, for example, on the jar with a design of a boy

                 344  Yuan Dynasty Ceramics
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