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Chapter 07 (pp. 330-385)_Layout 1  7/7/10  5:42 PM  Page 346











































                                                                       C&C: Silo image




                                        7.23. Ding ware molded dish or plate with design of boys playing in a garden, Jin-Yuan
                                        period, thirteenth century, 2.7 cm tall, 22.1 cm diameter. Sir Percival David Collection at
                                        the British Museum.




                      among flowers bearing a dated inscription equivalent to  phoenixes, and human or animal figures in landscape set-
                      the year 1305 (see Fig. 7.22).                       tings that are framed by an ogival window.
                        Utilitarian  vessels  were  the  specialty  of  the  Cizhou  The fish motif was used during the Yuan dynasty not
                      kilns. Slip-painted inscriptions on surviving Jin and Yuan  only  at  the  Cizhou  kilns  but  also  at  the  Longquan,
                      wares give dates or contents, such as “good wine,” re-  Jingdezhen, and Jizhou kiln complexes (Fig. 7.24). At this
                      vealing their main use as containers for food or drink.  time, the carp symbolized being of good descent, modest
                                                                                           56
                      Cizhou wares make up 40 percent of all wares excavated  and  incorruptible. Several  paintings  dated  to  the  late
                      at Yuan Dadu (located underneath parts of Beijing). Of  Song and early Yuan dynasties—including a handscroll
                      those excavated, 80 percent were painted with underglaze  dated to the twelfth century and attributed to Liu Cai,
                      iron brown or black pigment. Cizhou wares were popu-  now  in  the  St.  Louis  Art  Museum,  and  another  dated
                      lar, particularly among people living in the affluent non-  1291 by Zhou Dongqing in the collection of the Metro-
                      Chinese residential districts. A Cizhou-style wine bottle  politan Museum of Art—allude to the subtle meaning of
                      bearing  the  inscription  “inner  palace”  (neifu), however,  this motif for Sung loyalists, who under alien rule felt like
                      reveals that they were also used in the imperial palace as  fish out of water. Any learned man upon seeing such an
                      wine and storage jars. 55                            image  would  connect  it  with  Confucius’  comment,
                        Yuan Cizhou wares feature a decidedly looser painting  recorded  in  the  “Dazongshi”  chapter  of  Zhuangzi, that
                      style than do Song wares, and the Mongol preference for  “Fish are born in water. Man is born in the Tao [Dao].”
                      dense patterns is evident on many surviving examples.  Since the transformation of the carp into a dragon was
                      The most common types of Yuan Cizhou wares feature   also a symbol of passing examinations to become a Chi-
                      black  to  blackish  brown  iron  oxide  slip  painting  on  a  nese official, the image of fish was a particularly poignant
                      beige clay body coated with a transparent or peacock blue  one for Chinese scholars deprived of the opportunity to
                      glaze.  Common  motifs  were  fish,  flowers,  dragons,  serve as officials. 57

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