Bowl
1 of 7
Object Label
Both of these dishes were decorated using stamped patterns: a patterned mold was pressed against the surface of the dish, and white slip was then painted over the textured surface. In the case of the greener dish, most of the slip was rubbed away before glazing, leaving white only in the indentations. In the whiter dish, the impressed pattern is only barely visible under the loosely applied slip.
The greener dish is typical of the more elite wares made for donation to the royal court, and indeed it bears the mark of a government office at the center. The whiter dish is more typical of later tastes, when the painterly quality of the brushed-on slip was considered desirable.
Caption
Bowl, first half of 15th century. Buncheong ware, glazed stoneware with white slip, Height: 1 1/2 in. (3.8 cm) Diameter at mouth: 6 9/16 in. (16.7 cm) Diameter at base: 2 3/8 in. (6 cm). Brooklyn Museum, The Peggy N. and Roger G. Gerry Collection, 2004.28.39.
Collection
Collection
Title
Bowl
Date
first half of 15th century
Dynasty
Joseon dynasty
Geography
Place made: Cholla Province, Korea
Medium
Buncheong ware, glazed stoneware with white slip
Classification
Dimensions
Height: 1 1/2 in. (3.8 cm) Diameter at mouth: 6 9/16 in. (16.7 cm) Diameter at base: 2 3/8 in. (6 cm)
Credit Line
The Peggy N. and Roger G. Gerry Collection
Accession Number
2004.28.39
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