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Vintage Siam Celadon Green Wood Ash Glaze Thailand Hand Made Candle Holder
$ 5.27
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
[zipedit]Vintage Siam Celadon Green Wood Ash Glaze
Hand
Made in Thailand Lotus Flower Candle Holder
Excellent Condition No Issues but Normal Crazing
Celadon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Celadon
is a term for
pottery
denoting both wares
glazed
in the
jade
green
celadon color
, also known as
greenware
(the term specialists now tend to use), and a type of transparent glaze, often with small cracks, that was first used on greenware, but later used on other porcelains. Celadon originated in
China
, though the term is purely European, and notable kilns such as the
Longquan kiln
in
Zhejiang
province are renowned for their celadon glazes. Celadon production later spread to other parts of East Asia, such as
Japan
and
Korea
as well as Southeast Asian countries such as
Thailand
. Eventually, European potteries produced some pieces, but it was never a major element there. Finer pieces are in
porcelain
, but both the color and the glaze can be produced in
stoneware
and
earthenware
. Most of the earlier Longquan celadon is on the border of stoneware and porcelain, meeting the Chinese but not the European definitions of porcelain.
For many centuries, celadon wares were highly regarded by the Chinese Imperial court, before being replaced in fashion by painted wares, especially the new
blue and white porcelain
under the
Yuan dynasty
. The similarity of the color to jade, traditionally the most highly valued material in China, was a large part of its attraction. Celadon continued to be produced in China at a lower level, often with a conscious sense of reviving older styles. In Korea the celadons produced under the
Goryeo Dynasty
(918–1392) are regarded as the classic wares of
Korean porcelain
.
The celadon colour is classically produced by firing a glaze containing a little
iron oxide
at a high temperature in a
reducing
kiln. The materials must be refined, as other chemicals can alter the color completely. Too little iron oxide causes a blue colour (sometimes a desired effect), and too much gives olive and finally black; the right amount is between 0.75% and 2.5%. The presence of other chemicals may have effects;
titanium dioxide
gives a yellowish tinge. Pieces made with a celadon glaze are themselves often referred to as "celadons".
Etymology
The term "celadon" for the pottery's pale
jade
-green glaze was coined by European connoisseurs of the wares. The most commonly accepted theory is that the term first appeared in
France
in the 17th century and that it is named after the shepherd Celadon in
Honoré d'Urfé
's
French
pastoral romance,
L'Astrée
(1627), who wore pale green ribbons. (D'Urfe, in turn, borrowed his character from
Ovid
's
Metamorphoses
V.210.) Another theory is that the term is a
corruption
of the name of
Saladin
(Salah ad-Din), the
Ayyubid
Sultan, who in 1171 sent forty pieces of the ceramic to
Nur ad-Din Zengi
, Sultan of
Syria
. Yet a third theory is that the word derives from the
Sanskrit
sila
and
dhara
, which mean "green" and "stone" respectively.
Production and characteristics
Celadon
glaze
refers to a family of usually partly transparent but coloured glazes, many with pronounced (and sometimes accentuated) "crackle", or tiny cracks in the glaze produced in a wide variety of colors, generally used on stoneware or porcelain pottery bodies.
So-called "true celadon", which requires a minimum 1,260 °C (2,300 °F) furnace temperature, a preferred range of 1,285 to 1,305 °C (2,345 to 2,381 °F), and firing in a
reducing atmosphere
, originated at the beginning of the
Northern Song Dynasty
(960–1127), at least on one strict definition. The unique grey or green celadon glaze is a result of
iron oxide
's transformation from
ferric
to
ferrous
iron (Fe
2
O
3
→ FeO) during the firing process. Individual pieces in a single firing can have significantly different colours, from small variations in conditions in different parts of the kiln. Most of the time, green was the desired colour, reminding the Chinese of
jade
, always the most valued material in Chinese culture.
Celadon glazes can be produced in a variety of colors, including white, grey, blue and yellow, depending on several factors:
the thickness of the applied glaze,
the type of clay to which it is applied,
the exact chemical makeup of the glaze,
the firing temperature
the degree of reduction in the kiln atmosphere and
the degree of opacity in the glaze.
The most famous and desired shades range from a very pale green to deep intense green, often meaning to mimic the green shades of jade. The main color effect is produced by
iron oxide
in the glaze recipe or clay body. Celadons are almost exclusively fired in a
reducing atmosphere
kiln
as the chemical changes in the iron oxide which accompany depriving it of free oxygen are what produce the desired colors. As with most glazes,
crazing
(a glaze defect) can occur in the glaze and, if the characteristic is desirable, is referred to as "crackle" glaze.
East Asia
Chinese celadons
Greenwares are found in earthenware from the
Shang dynasty
onwards.
Archaeologist
Wang Zhongshu
states that shards with a celadon
ceramic glaze
have been recovered from
Eastern Han Dynasty
(25–220 AD) tomb excavations in
Zhejiang
, and that this type of ceramic became well known during the
Three Kingdoms
(220–265).
These are now often called
proto-celadons
, and tend to browns and yellows, without much green.
The earliest major type of celadon was
Yue ware
, which was succeeded by a number of kilns in north China producing wares known as
Northern Celadons
, sometimes used by the imperial court. The best known of these is
Yaozhou ware
. All these types were already widely exported to the rest of East Asia and the Islamic world.
Longquan celadon
wares, were first made during the Northern Song, but flourished under the Southern Song, as the capital moved to the south and the northern kilns declined. This had bluish, blue-green, and olive green glazes and the bodies increasingly had high
silica
and
alkali
contents which resembled later
porcelain
wares made at
Jingdezhen
and
Dehua
rather than
stonewares
.
All the wares mentioned above were mostly in, or aiming to be in, some shade of green. Other wares which can be classified as celadons, were more often in shades of pale blue, very highly valued by the Chinese, or various browns and off-whites. These were often the most highly regarded at the time and by later Chinese connoisseurs, and sometimes made more or less exclusively for the court. These include
Ru ware
,
Guan ware
and
Ge ware
,
as well as earlier types such as the "secret colour" (
mi se
) wares,
finally identified when the crypt at the
Famen Temple
was opened.
Large quantities of Longquan celadon were exported throughout East Asia, Southeast Asia and the Middle East in the 13th–15th century. Large celadon dishes were especially welcomed in Islamic nations. Since about 1420 the Counts of
Katzenelnbogen
have owned the oldest European import of celadon, reaching Europe indirectly via the Islamic world. This is a cup mounted in metal in Europe, and exhibited in Kassel in the Landesmuseum.
After the development of
blue and white porcelain
in
Jingdezhen ware
in the early 14th century, celadon gradually went out of fashion in both Chinese and export markets, and after about 1500 both the quality and quantity of production was much reduced, though there were some antiquarian revivals of celadon glazes on Jingdezhen porcelain in later centuries.
Decoration in Chinese celadons is normally only by shaping the body or creating shallow designs on the flat surface which allow the glaze to pool in depressions, giving a much deeper colour to accentuate the design. In both methods carving, moulding and a range of other techniques may be used. There is very rarely any contrast with a completely different colour, except where parts of a piece are sometimes left as unglazed
biscuit
in Longquan celadon.
Japanese celadons
The Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese characters for greenware is
seiji
(
青磁
). It was introduced during the Song Dynasty (960–1270) from China and via Korea. Even though Japan has arguably the most diverse styles of ceramic art in the modern era, greenware was mostly avoided by potters because of the high loss rate of up to 80%.
Kaolinite
, the
ceramic
material usually used for the production of porcelain, also does not exist in large quantities like in China. One of the sources for kaolin in Japan is from
Amakusa
in Kyushu. Nevertheless a number of artists emerged whose works received critical acclaim in regards to the quality and colour of the glazes achieved, as well as later on in the innovation of modern design.
Three pieces originally from China have been registered by the government as a
national treasures
. They are two flower vases from the Longquan kiln dating to the southern Song dynasty in the 13th century, and a flower vase with iron brown spots also from Longquan kiln dating to the Yuan dynasty in the 13–14th century.
Production in the style of Longquan was centred around
Arita, Saga
and in the
Saga Domain
under the lords of the
Nabeshima clan
. Greenware is also closed entwined with
hakuji
(
白磁
) white porcelain. The glaze with a mixed subtle colour gradations of icy, bluish white is called
seihakuji
(青白磁) porcelain. In Chinese this type of glaze is known as
Qingbai ware
. Qingbai's history goes back to the Song dynasty. It is biscuit-fired and painted with a glaze containing small amounts of iron. This turns a bluish colour when fired again. Japanese artists and clients tend to favour the
seihakuji
bluish white glaze over the completely green glaze.
Pieces that are produced are normally tea or rice bowls,
sake
cups, vases, and plates, and
mizusashi
water jars for tea ceremony, censers and boxes. Some post-modern ceramic artists have however expanded into the area of sculpture and abstract art as well.
Artists from the early Showa era are Itaya Hazan (1872–1963), Tomimoto Kenkichi (1886–1963), Kato Hajme (1900–1968), Tsukamoto Kaiji (
塚本快示
) (1912–1990), and Okabe Mineo (1919–1990), who specialized in
Guan ware
with its crackled glaze. Tsukamoto Kaiji was nominated a
Living National Treasure
in 1983 for his works in
seihakuji
. Artists from the mid- to late Showa era were Shimizu Uichi (1926–?), who also specialized in crackled glaze, Suzuki Osamu (1926-2001), Miura Koheiji (1933-?), Suzuki Sansei (b. 1936),
Fukami Sueharu
(b. 1947), and Takenaka Ko (b. 1941). During the Heisei era artists are Masamichi Yoshikawa (b. 1946), Kawase Shinobu (b. 1950), Minegishi Seiko (b. 1952), Kubota Atsuko (b. 1953), Yagi Akira (b. 1955) and Kato Tsubusa (
加藤委
) (b. 1962).
Artists such as Fukami Sueharu, Masamichi Yoshikawa, and Kato Tsubusa also produce abstract pieces, and their works are part of a number of national and international museum collections. Kato Tsubusa works with kaolin from New Zealand.
Korean celadons
Chinese greenwares were very popular imports to Korea, and inspired local potters. Exceptional high-quality celadons were produced in Korea during the
Goryeo
and
Joseon
dynasties. An inlaid greenware technique known as
sanggam
, where potters would engrave semi-dried pottery with designs and place black or white clay materials within the engraving, was invented in Korea during this time.
Korean greenware, also known as "
Goryeo celadon
" is usually a pale green-blue in color. The glaze was developed and refined during the 10th and 11th centuries during the Goryeo period, from which it derives its name. Korean greenware reached its zenith between the 12th and early 13th centuries, however, the
Mongol invasions of Korea
in the 13th century and persecution by the Joseon Dynasty government destroyed the craft.
The
Gangjin Kiln Sites
produced a large number of Goryeo wares and were a complex of 188 kilns. The kiln sites are located in
Gangjin
-gun,
Jeollanam-do
near the sea. Mountains in the north provided the necessary raw materials such as firewood,
kaolinite
, and
silicon dioxide
for the master potters while a well established system of distribution transported pottery throughout Korea and facilitated export to China and Japan. The sites are tentatively listed as a
World Heritage
by the South Korean government. Celadon was used as a "spirit vessel" or Chy- Tang to summon spirits to bring positivity, in many Korean temples from the 14th century.
Traditional Korean greenware has distinctive decorative elements. The most distinctive are decorated by overlaying glaze on contrasting clay bodies. With inlaid designs, known as
sanggam
in Korean, small pieces of colored clay are inlaid in the base clay. Carved or
slip
-carved designs require layers of a different colored clay adhered to the base clay of the piece. The layers are then carved away to reveal the varying colors.
A number of items dating from the Goryeo dynasty have been registered by the government as a
National Treasure of South Korea
, such as a Dragon kettle from the 12th century (National Treasure No. 61), a
maebyeong
vase with
sanggam
engraved cranes (National Treasure No. 68), an elaborate
censer
with kingfisher glaze (National Treasure No. 95), and a pitcher in the shape of a
Dragon Turtle
(National Treasure No. 96).
Modern potters, with modern materials and tools, have attempted to recreate Korean greenware techniques. An artist of the post-war era who specialised in it was
Living National Treasure
Yu Geun-Hyeong
(유근형; 柳根瀅) (1894–1993). His work was documented in the short film
Koryo Celadon
in 1979.
Another artist who was also a Living National Treasure was
Ji Suntaku
(1912–1993). Icheon Ceramics Village features hundreds of makers in the areas of Sugwang-ri, Sindun-myeon, Saeum-dong in the city of
Icheon
.
The
National Museum of Korea
in Seoul houses important celadon works and national treasures. The
Haegang Ceramics Museum
and the
Goryeo Celadon Museum
are two regional museums that focus on Korean greenware.
Southeast Asia
Thai celadon
Thai ceramics
has its own tradition of greenware production. Medieval Thai wares were initially influenced by Chinese greenware, but went on to develop its own unique style and technique. One of the most famous kilns during the
Sukhothai Kingdom
were at S(r)i Satchanalai, around
Si Satchanalai District
and
Sawankhalok District
in
Sukhothai Province
, north-central Thailand. Production started in the 13th century CE and continued until the 16th century. The art reached its apex in the 14th century.
Others
Outside of East Asia a number of artists also worked with greenware to varying degrees of success in regards to purity and quality. These include
Thomas Bezanson
of
Weston Priory
and
Wanda Golakowska
(1901–1975) of Poland, whose works are part of the collection of the
National Museum, Warsaw
and
National Museum, Kraków
.