Page 56 - Yuan_Dynasty_Ceramics
P. 56

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







                 Hongwu  emperor’s  imperial  palace  at  Nanjing.  During  tion at the Longquan kilns declined severely due to the
                 the reign of the Xuande emperor, too, iron red and other  loss of imperial patronage and heavy taxes. In accordance
                 overglaze enamels were used in combination with under-  with  the  taste  and  precepts  of  the  Chinese  early  Ming
                 glaze blue to create the earliest known examples of doucai  literati,  production  of  popular  wares  from  the  Cizhou
                 (joined  colors),  considered  precursors  to  the  most  kilns continued during the Ming and Qing dynasties not
                 renowned examples of doucai produced during the reign  as an art form but as a way of creating utilitarian vessels.
                 of the Chenghua emperor (1465–1487). 254             Ming Cizhou jars, sometimes large, and occasionally with
                                                                      dated  inscriptions,  seem  to  have  been  commonly  used
                                                                      for wine shipment and storage. 256  Conversely, Jun wares
                 Conclusion: The Enduring Influence of
                                                                      enjoyed a revival in the late fourteenth to early fifteenth
                 Yuan Ceramics                                        centuries when potters at the Juntai kilns were inspired
                                                                      by classic Song examples. 257
                 The ascendancy of the porcelains of Jingdezhen under   Probably due to cultural bias against the non-Chinese
                 the Yuan dynasty enriched and changed perceptions of  Mongols, early Ming scholars did their best to obscure
                 Chinese ceramics both nationally and internationally. De-  the Yuan dynasty’s place in history. Indeed, many Chi-
                 velopments under the Mongols of the Yuan dynasty, es-  nese scholars during the time of Khubilai’s reign through
                 pecially the creation of blue and white porcelain, added  the fourteenth century harbored deep-seated anti-foreign
                 to China’s lasting reputation as the world’s leader in ce-  and anti-Islamic attitudes that influenced their ability to
                 ramics. The empire thrived because of the free exchange  appreciate outside ideas and innovations. But scholarly
                 of  goods  and  ideas  during  this  innovative  eighty-nine-  resistance could not forever mask that the confluence of
                 year period.                                         Mongol, Tibetan Buddhist, and Muslim influences in the
                    As Jingdezhen gained an ever-larger share of the ce-  Yuan court had resulted in the creation of the world’s
                 ramics  market,  potters  at  other  Yuan  kilns  such  as  finest blue and white porcelain. 258  The Mongols, who had
                 Longquan appropriated its designs and techniques. Dur-  enlisted the services of worthy, conquered artisans from
                 ing the first reign of the Ming dynasty, painted designs  myriad countries, had encouraged a great flourishing of
                 popularized  at  the  Hongwu  imperial  kiln  were  repro-  artistic innovation in ceramics during their rule. Conse-
                 duced in carved and molded Longquan celadon. Excava-  quently,  even  as  fourteenth-century  connoisseurs  dis-
                 tions at the Hongwu imperial kiln have revealed blue and  missed  the  vulgar  taste  of  the  Mongols,  or  disparaged
                 white,  and  underglaze  red,  designs  that  recur  on  their  practices,  blue  and  white  porcelain  captivated  an
                 Longquan  wares  believed  to  be  of  the  same  period. 255  ever-growing  audience  among  the  Chinese  and  others
                 Later in the Ming and Qing dynasties, however, produc-  both near and far. 259



































                                                                                                        Yuan Dynasty Ceramics  385
   51   52   53   54   55   56