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Image from page 222 of “Chinese pottery and porcelain : an account of the potter’s art in China from primitive occasions to the present day” (1915)
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Identifier: chinesepotterypo01hobs
Title: Chinese pottery and porcelain : an account of the potter’s art in China from primitive instances to the present day
Year: 1915 (1910s)
Authors: Hobson, R. L. (Robert Lockhart), 1872-1941
Subjects: Pottery — China History
Publisher: New York : Funk and Wagnalls
Contributing Library: New York Public Library
Digitizing Sponsor: MSN
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Text Appearing Prior to Image:
aucers, actually signifies bottom or base. Hirthreads it, Those which have bottoms like the flower pots in which sword-grass is grownare considered the most excellent and Julien appears to have fairly misunderstoodthe application of the passage. The original is ifc^fiifl^jiS^I&ft®- The shallowsaucers in which the deep flower pots stood are often integrated amongst the bulbbowls. See Plates 37 and 40. * See the excellent account of the Chun wares by Mrs. Williams in the introductionto the Catalogue of a Loan Exhibition of Chinese, Corean, and Japanese Potteries heldby the Japan Society of New York, 1914. * Shrivelled glaze is at times seen on the Chun kinds of pottery. Almost certainly thiswas at first, at any rate, an accidental effect but it is the prototype of the dragon PLATE 35Flower pot of Chun Chou ware of the Sung Dynasty. Grey porcellanous physique : olive brown glaze beneath the base and the numeral shih(ten) incised. Height (with out the wooden stand) 5| inches. Eumorfopoulos Collection.
Text Appearing Right after Image:
PU Chiin Wares and Some Other individuals 113 gate the surface of the Chiin wares have been noticed by Chinesewriters as hares fur marking and flames of blue. ^ Other folks,which appear to be irregular partings in the colour of the glaze,have been named chiu ying wen or earthworm marks. Theselast hardly ever appear except on the finer kind of Chiin wares, and,like the tear stains on the Ting porcelains, they are regardedas signs of authenticity. Although the beautiful Chiin wares of the tzil fai group will alwaysbe uncommon and expensive, Western collectors have been fortunate in secur-ing a fair quantity of specimens, and a superb series of themwas brought collectively in March, 1914, in the exhibition held by theJapan Society of New York. The types of the flower pots varyconsiderably. Some have globular body with high spreading neckand wide mouth others are bell-shaped like a deep cup othersare deep bowls with sides shaped in six or eight lobes like the petalsof a flower other individuals are of quatrefoil form and ot
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