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5 janvier 2025

Sà Huynh Culture Jars at Minneapolis Institute of Art

Jar, Vìetnam, Sà Huynh Culture, c. 1000 BCE-200. Black earthenware with red pigments and impressed decor, 7.6 x 12.7 x 12.7 cm. Minneapolis Institute of Art, The Alan and Dena Naylor Southeast Asian Art Fund, 2001.31.1.

 

Iron age earthenware objects exhibit a number of local variations in south central Vietnam. The group shown here, when compared to other Sa Huynh ceramics, displays a finer workmanship; with balanced shapes, precise potting, neatly impressed and incised designs, carefully applied and partially burnished surfaces. The amount of decoration and the fact that all four jars were retrieved from the same burial indicates that they served a ritual or ceremonial purpose. More elaborate then everyday utilitarian ware, they likely held food for the deceased in the afterlife.

Jar, Vìetnam, Sà Huynh Culture, c. 1000 BCE-200. Pottery, pigment, 11.6 x 12.5 x 12.5 cm. Minneapolis Institute of Art, The Alan and Dena Naylor Southeast Asian Art Fund, 2001.31.2.

Jar, Vìetnam, Sà Huynh Culture, c. 1000 BCE-200. Pottery, pigment, 11.9 x 17.8 x 17.8 cm. Minneapolis Institute of Art, The Alan and Dena Naylor Southeast Asian Art Fund, 2001.31.3.

Jar, Vìetnam, Sà Huynh Culture, c. 1000 BCE-200. Pottery, pigment, 13.2 x 17.0 x 17.0 cm. Minneapolis Institute of Art, The Alan and Dena Naylor Southeast Asian Art Fund, 2001.31.4.

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