A celadon glazed ewer, Goryeo Dynasty (12th century)
Lot 85. A celadon glazed ewer, Goryeo Dynasty (12th century), 9 7/8 in. (25.1 cm.) high. Estimate USD 120,000 - USD 130,000. © Christie's Images Ltd 2017
The tall ewer modeled as a bamboo shoot with incised details, applied with s-shaped spout and handle, covered with a glaze of soft sea-green tone. With wood box
Note: Korea’s best-known ceramics, the celadon wares, were produced during the Goryeo dynasty (918–1392), an era of supreme artistic refinement. Vessels with molded, incised, or carved decoration, such as this exquisite ewer, typify twelfth-century Korean wares, while ones with designs inlaid in black and white slips epitomize those of the thirteenth and fourteen centuries. As evinced by this bamboo-shoot-shaped ewer, Goryeo-period clients favored vessels in sculptural form, the forms characteristically suggesting bamboo shoots, lotus blossoms, ripe melons, calabash gourds, and open blossoms. Korean celadon glazes tend to be more transparent and also more bluish green than those of contemporaneous Chinese celadons. The finest Korean celadons rival their Chinese counterparts in terms of both artistic sophistication and technical achievement. Virtually identical ewers, all dated to the twelfth century, appear in the collections of the National Museum of Korea, Seoul (Deoksu-4499-0), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (50.966a-b), Museum of Oriental Ceramics, Osaka (20401), and Victoria and Albert Museum, London (C.527-1918).
Christie's. An Inquiring Mind: American Collecting of Japanese & Korean Art, 25 April 2017, New York, Rockefeller Center
