Covered Bowl
On View In:
Gallery 204
Artist:   Artist Unknown  
Title:   Covered Bowl  
Date:   Northern Sung dynasty  
Medium:   Yao-chou ware Stoneware with persimmon brown glaze  
Dimensions:   4 1/2 x 4 11/16 in. (11.43 x 11.91 cm)  
Credit Line:   Gift of Ruth and Bruce Dayton  
Location:   Gallery 204  

This handsomely shaped lidded bowl with vertical slightly inturned walls was a popular ceramic form during the Sung dynasty (960-1279). The type was produced at several kilns in a variety of glazes.

The subtle color of this brown glazed ware, called kaki(persimmon) by the Japanese, was derived by a very high content of iron which forms a brown skin on the surface that contrasts with a darker color beneath the surface. The fact that the bowl is glazed down to the base, with the foot and interior also glazed indicates the earlier phase of this ware's manufacture during the Northern Sung period (960-1127). The fine hard clay of the body suggests the Yao-chou kiln in Shansi province as the likely source of manufacture.


Object Description  
  
Classification:   Ceramic  
Physical Description:   small round-bottomed bowl with short foot; sides slightly flaring inward; slightly domed lid with wide lip; small finial; brown glaze  
Creation Place:   Asia, China  
Accession #:   2000.89.3a,b  
Owner:   The Minneapolis Institute of Arts