Blue and white pottery

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Ming plate 15th century Jingdezhen kilns Jiangxi.jpg
Stone paste dish Iznik Turkey 1550 1570.JPG
Left image: Ming plate with grape design, 15th century, Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi. British Museum.
Right image: Stone-paste dish with grape design, Iznik, Turkey, 1550–1570. British Museum.

Chinese blue and white ware became extremely popular in the Middle East from the 14th century, where both Chinese and Islamic types coexisted. [20]

From the 13th century, Chinese pictorial designs, such as flying cranes, dragons and lotus flowers also started to appear in the ceramic productions of the Near-East, especially in Syria and Egypt. [21]

Chinese porcelain of the 14th or 15th century was transmitted to the Middle-East and the Near East, and especially to the Ottoman Empire either through gifts or through war booty. Chinese designs were extremely influential with the pottery manufacturers at Iznik, Turkey. The Ming "grape" design in particular was highly popular and was extensively reproduced under the Ottoman Empire. [21]

Japan

The Japanese were early admirers of Chinese blue and white and, despite the difficulties of obtaining cobalt (from Iran via China), soon produced their own blue and white wares, usually in Japanese porcelain, which began to be produced around 1600. As a group, these are called sometsuke (染付). Much of this production is covered by the vague regional term Arita ware, but some kilns, like the high-quality Hirado ware, specialized in blue and white, and made little else. A high proportion of wares from about 1660–1740 were Japanese export porcelain, mostly for Europe.

The most exclusive kiln, making Nabeshima ware for political gifts rather than trade, made much porcelain only with blue, but also used blue heavily in its polychrome wares, where the decoration of the sides of dishes is typically only in blue. Hasami ware and Tobe ware are more popular wares mostly using in blue and white.

Korea

The Koreans began to produce blue and white porcelain in the early 15th century, with the decoration influenced by Chinese styles. Later some blue and white stoneware was also made. The historical production therefore all falls under the Joseon dynasty, 1392–1897. In vases, the typical wide shoulders of the shapes preferred in Korea allowed for expansive painting. Dragon and flowering branches were among the popular subjects.

Europe

Early influences

Chinese blue-and-white ware were copied in Europe from the 16th century, with the faience blue-and-white technique called alla porcelana. Soon after the first experiments to reproduce the material of Chinese blue-and-white porcelain were made with Medici porcelain. These early works seem to be mixing influences from Islamic as well as Chinese blue-and-white wares. [22]

Direct Chinese imitations

By the beginning of the 17th century Chinese blue and white porcelain was being exported directly to Europe. In the 17th and 18th centuries, Oriental blue and white porcelain was highly prized in Europe and America and sometimes enhanced by fine silver and gold mounts, it was collected by kings and princes.

The European manufacture of porcelain started at Meissen in Germany in 1707. The detailed secrets of Chinese hard-paste porcelain technique were transmitted to Europe through the efforts of the Jesuit Father Francois Xavier d'Entrecolles between 1712 and 1722. [23]

The early wares were strongly influenced by Chinese and other Oriental porcelains and an early pattern was blue onion, which is still in production at the Meissen factory today. The first phase of the French porcelain was also strongly influenced by Chinese designs.

Early English porcelain wares were also influenced by Chinese wares and when, for example, the production of porcelain started at Worcester, nearly forty years after Meissen, Oriental blue and white wares provided the inspiration for much of the decoration used. Hand-painted and transfer-printed wares were made at Worcester and at other early English factories in a style known as Chinoiserie. Chelsea porcelain and Bow porcelain in London and Lowestoft porcelain in East Anglia made especially heavy use of blue and white. By the 1770s Wedgwood's jasperware, and still using cobalt oxide, found a new approach to blue and white ceramics, and remains popular today.

Many other European factories followed this trend. In Delft, Netherlands blue and white ceramics taking their designs from Chinese export porcelains made for the Dutch market were made in large numbers throughout the 17th Century. Blue and white Delftware was itself extensively copied by factories in other European countries, including England, where it is known as English Delftware.

Patterns

The plate shown in the illustration (left) is decorated, using transfer printing, with the famous willow pattern and was made by Royal Stafford; a factory in the English county of Staffordshire. Such is the persistence of the willow pattern that it is difficult to date the piece shown with any precision; it is possibly quite recent but similar wares have been produced by English factories in huge numbers over long periods and are still being made today. The willow pattern, said to tell the sad story of a pair of star-crossed lovers, was an entirely European design, though one that was strongly influenced in style by design features borrowed from Chinese export porcelains of the 18th century. The willow pattern was, in turn, copied by Chinese potters, but with the decoration hand painted rather than transfer-printed.

Vietnam

A migration of Chinese potters to neighboring Vietnam during the Yuan dynasty is thought to be the beginnings of Vietnamese blue-and-white production. [24] However, the 15th-century Chinese occupation of Vietnam (1407–27) is considered to be the main period of Chinese influence on Vietnamese ceramics. [25] During this period, Vietnamese potters readily adopted cobalt underglaze, which had already gained popularity in export markets in the Muslim world. Vietnamese blue-and-white wares sometimes featured two types of cobalt pigment: Middle Eastern cobalt yielded a vivid blue but was more expensive than the darker cobalt from Yunnan, China. [15]

Chu Đậu village in Hải Dương province was the major ceramic manufacturer [26] From 1436 to 1465, China’s Ming dynasty abruptly ceased trade with the outside world, creating a commercial vacuum that allowed Vietnamese blue-and-white ceramics to monopolize the markets for sometimes, especially in Maritime Southeast Asia. This shift was intensified by a domestic shortage supply of cobalt, the main pigment used in blue and white porcelain, limiting China's production value during this period. Vietnamese wares of this era have been found all over Asia, from Japan, throughout Southeast Asia (Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines), to the Middle East (the Arabian port of Julfar, Persia, Syria, Turkey, Egypt), and Eastern Africa (Tanzania). [15] [27] [28] [29]

See also

Notes

  1. ""Tang Blue-and-White," by Regina Krahl" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-12-21. Retrieved 2017-07-25.
  2. "Iraq and China: Ceramics, Trade, and Innovation". Archived from the original on 2017-09-19. Retrieved 2017-07-26.
  3. Met description
  4. 1 2 Medley, 177
  5. Lazaward (Lajvard) and Zaffer Cobalt Oxide in Islamic and Western Lustre Glass and Ceramics
  6. Bekken, Deborah A.; Niziolek, Lisa C.; Feinman, Gary M. (1 February 2018). China: Visions through the Ages. University of Chicago Press. p. 274. ISBN   978-0-226-45617-1.
  7. A Landmark in the History of Chinese Ceramics: The Invention of Blue-and-white Porcelain in the Tang Dynasty (618–907 A.D.)
  8. 1 2 "Song blue-and-white was rare enough, but Tang blue-and-white was unheard of" in Chinese glazes: their origins, chemistry, and recreation Nigel Wood p.97
  9. curating the oceans and Belintung shipwreck
  10. Kessler 2012, pp.  1–16.
  11. Medley, 177
  12. Kessler 2012, p.  9.
  13. Kessler is a book devoted to arguing for earlier dates, as summarized in the Introduction. For earlier 20th century views, see p. 3 in particular. See Medley, p. 176 for a rejection of such dates.
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Finlay, p.158ff
  15. 1 2 3 Gessert, Richard (February 15, 2022). "More Kinds of Blue". The Art Institute of Chicago.
  16. Kessler 2012, pp.  253–254.
  17. 1 2 3 Musée Guimet permanent exhibit
  18. Ford & Impey, 126-127
  19. China's last empire: the great Qing William T. Rowe, Timothy Brook p.84
  20. Medieval Islamic civilization: an encyclopedia by Josef W. Meri, Jere L. Bacharach p.143
  21. 1 2 Notice of British Museum "Islamic Art Room" permanent exhibit.
  22. Western Decorative Arts National Gallery of Art (U.S.), Rudolf Distelberger p.238
  23. Baghdiantz McCabe, Ina (2008) Orientalism in Early Modern France, ISBN   978-1-84520-374-0, Berg Publishing, Oxford, p.220ff
  24. Krahl, Regina (1997). "Vietnamese Blue-and-White and Related Wares". In Stevenson, John; Guy, John (eds.). Vietnamese Ceramics: A Separate Tradition. Art Media Resources. pp. 148–149. ISBN   1878529226.
  25. Krahl 1997, p. 149.
  26. "Chu Đậu ceramics". Archived from the original on 2015-12-21. Retrieved 2020-08-06.
  27. Vietnamese Ceramics in the Malay World
  28. Early History and Distribution of Trade Ceramics in Southeast Asia
  29. Ueda Shinya; Nishino Noriko (4 October 2017). "The International Ceramics Trade and Social Change in the Red River Delta in the Early Modern Period". Asian Review of World Histories. 5 (2). brill.com: 123–144. doi: 10.1163/22879811-12340008 . S2CID   135205531.

References

Blue and white porcelain
MET DP342705 (cropped).jpg
Chinese blue and white jar, Ming dynasty, mid-15th century