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Image Not Available for Ceremonial Wine Pot
Ceremonial Wine Pot
Image Not Available for Ceremonial Wine Pot

Ceremonial Wine Pot

ClassificationsDECORATIVE ARTS
Date1662-1721
Mediumporcelain
Dimensions8 x 8 in. (20.3 x 20.3 cm.)
DescriptionOne of two Kangxi dynasty porcelain peach-shaped wine ewers. with turquoise and aubergine glazes. The vertical tublar extensions inside these ewers allowed them to be filled through the hole in the base and when turned over it did not need to be plugged. This shape was first made towards the end of the Ming dynasty and blue and white examples were found in the wreck of a Chinese junk sunk off the coast of Java (The Hatcher wreck). They were copied by the Rockingham factory in England ca. 1830 and henceforth known as 'Cadogan teapots'. The peaches represent longevity. They are resting on carved teackwood bases.
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens. Gift of Florence M. Quinn
Status
Not on view
Object number44.92
Terms
    Unknown, Chinese, 18th Century
    1736-1795
    Object number: 11.42
    Mandarin Jar
    Unknown, Chinese, 18th Century
    1736-1795
    Object number: 11.43
    Unknown
    1368-1644
    Object number: 44.81
    Unknown
    1368-1644
    Object number: 44.77
    Unknown
    1662-1721
    Object number: 44.91
    Unknown
    1662-1721
    Object number: 44.90
    Unknown
    1368-1644
    Object number: 44.86
    Photography © 2015 Fredrik Nilsen
    Orazio Fontana
    ca. 1565-1571
    Object number: 27.170
    Ewer
    Sèvres Porcelain Manufactory
    ca. 1775
    Object number: 27.68