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We Call Them Ginger Jars  European Re-framings of Chinese Ceramic Containers








          this essay focuses on a prominent case of transcultural exchange in material culture. it considers

          three types of ceramic containers made in China in different time periods that were all equally

          received as ‘ginger jars’ by european collectors.
                                                                    Anna Grasskamp and Wen-ting Wu










          Starting with the most well-known and
          widespread type, ‘ginger jars’ produced
          during the reign of Emperor Kangxi (1661-
          1722), this essay moves on to painted
          representations of ceramic containers in
 1        European still lifes. The titles of these
 Jar with lid - Ginger jar,   paintings indicate two strikingly different
 China, Jingdezhen,   types of ceramic vessels as ‘ginger jars’.
 1683 - 1710,   The terms ginger jar,  Ingwertopf  and pot
 porcelain painted in   de gingembre derive from the earlier Dutch
 underglaze blue,   gemberpot, which might be associated
 26.5 x 21.9 cm, Victoria   with  confijt pot, a description that, as Eva
 and Albert Museum,   Ströber has pointed out, appeared in Dutch
 London,  ship inventories of 1635. 1  Although such
 inv. no. C.820&A-1910   containers were not necessarily used for
 © Victoria and Albert   preserving ginger, they could and did store
 Museum, London  spices, tea, dried food, and pickled fruits or
          vegetables, and liquid or solid substances  understood as an act of creative transcultural   2
          for medical use. This essay, however, focuses   re-framing on behalf of Europeans. New  De Leeuwarder
          on the vessels themselves, adding the three  frameworks of collecting as articulated  Lakkamer in het
          most important types of ‘ginger jars’ to  through interior design arrangements, still  Rijksmuseum,
          a history of Chinese ceramic containers  life representations and object imitations,  Leeuwarden, before
          in transcultural exchange. Comparable  historically transformed Chinese ceramic  1695, kuan cai
          to the ‘critical creative act’ that Andrew  vessels from items used for storage and as gift   lacquer and gilded lime
          Watsky observes in the re-contextualisation   containers to objects of display. The essay is   wood, 514 x 305,9 x
          of Chinese storage jars in Japanese tea  concerned with this re-framing of the empty   295,6 cm, Rijksmuseum
          ceremony practices, 2  the European re-  jars as evidenced through terminology as  Amsterdam,
          contextualisation of empty Chinese storage  well as contemporary and historic collecting   inv. no. BK-16709 ©
          vessels as objects of display can also be  contexts.                     Rijksmuseum,Amsterdam

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