Page 412 - Oriental Series Japan and China, Brinkly
P. 412
CHINA
to produce ? He may have sought to exercise a gen-
eral control over these forces, but he knew that the
less he limited .their influence, the wider was the
range of his creative resources. This conception, to
which doubtless is due the exquisite Yao-pien ware,
with its graded tones, its colours blending with and
merging into one another, its richness, depth, bril-
liancy, softness, and glow, remained utilised, perhaps
unappreciated by Western potters, until in recent
years some of its effects were happily reproduced in
the beautiful wares of Linthorpe and Haviland. The
lector of Chinese porcelain and pottery owes to the
Yao-pien the pleasure of knowing that his field is
never exhausted. He may always hope to find novel-
ties as charming as any of his most treasured familiars.
^. TIGER-SKIN PORCELAIN. dch
on Iwasaki collection.) Height, 10 inches. (See page 341.)
There are a number of polychrom;
belong to the Tao-pie-n species inasr 10 two
of them are exactly aliker, but which fall naturally
into one class o- - the predominance of red in
their colours. Or these the commonest though not
the least beautiful, has two colours only, clair-de-lune
and red. Generally the clair-de-lune appears as a
ground colour, the red cropping out in rich fields
and flashes but sometimes this order is reversed, and
;
sometimes again the clair-de-lune occupies a very
secondary place, ba; ver-lapping the upper rim
of a vase and thence running downwards in thin
streaks. The ware is evidently a modification of the
Yuan-tsu, described in a previous chapter, where
clouds of carmine appear among a clair-de-lune envi-
ronment. Some pieces, indeed, are plainly an imita-
tion of the latter, and since the keramic skill of the
336