Important Chinese Art

Important Chinese Art

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 127. A rare black-glazed 'oil spot' vase, Jin dynasty | 金 黑釉油滴玉壺春瓶.

Property of a Private Collector

A rare black-glazed 'oil spot' vase, Jin dynasty | 金 黑釉油滴玉壺春瓶

Auction Closed

March 17, 08:20 PM GMT

Estimate

80,000 - 100,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

A rare black-glazed 'oil spot' vase

Jin dynasty

金 黑釉油滴玉壺春瓶


the pear-shaped body covered overall in a black glaze suffused with iridescent 'oil spots', the glaze stopping at the foot revealing the pale buff body, the mouth rim dressed in white slip, the base inscribed with a wen character


Height 9 in., 23 cm

Sotheby's Hong Kong, 29th-30th November 2018, lot 383.


來源

香港蘇富比2018年11月29至30日,編號383

‘Oil spot’ glazes were a specialty of the Linfen, Huairen, and Jiexiu kilns of Shanxi province, which mostly used them on small bowls, possibly inspired by the rare ‘oil spot’ tea bowls of the Jian kilns of Fujian. ‘Oil spot’ vases are very rare. The markings were probably formed by applying an iron-saturated slip on the body under the glaze, a new technique developed to cater to the subtle, refined tastes of the time. With a lustrous black glaze suffused with an intricate pattern of iridescent silver spots of varying sizes, the pattern of oil-spot wares was associated with starry nights or melting snow as described in contemporaneous literature. A vessel of this form was most likely used for serving wine.  


Compare two larger vases of this type, but covered with finer rust-brown spots, one preserved in the National Palace Museum, Taipei (accession no. 購-瓷-000158); and another in the Minneapolis Institute of Art, Minneapolis (accession no. 99.69.2). Oil-spot markings closely related to those on the current vase are more often found on bowls, see, for example, a bowl now in the Palace Museum, Beijing (accession no. 2365-106080).