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CHINESE OBJECTS FROM THE COLLECTION
Chinese Bronzes of the Shang and Zhou Periods
Han Dynasty Bronzes
Early Chinese Ceramics
Sculpture from Tombs
Chinese Buddhist Sculpture
Tang and Liao Dynasty Metalwork
Ceramics of the Song and Jin Periods
Porcelains of the Yuan and Early Ming Periods
Imperial Chinese Ceramics of the 15th Century
Ceramics of the Late Ming Period
Qing Dynasty Porcelain
Landscape Painting in China
Jade and Lacquer in China
Dish
China, Jiangxi Province; Ming period (1368-1644), early 15th century (probably Yongle era, 1403 - 1424)
Porcelain with impressed and incised design under glaze (Jingdezhen ware)
H. 4 in. (10.2 cm); D. 8 1/4 in. (21 cm)
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller 3rd Collection of Asian Art
1979.158
The decoration of two dragons among three clouds incised under the glaze in the interior of this thin dish is very difficult to see. This type of decoration is often termed anhua or "hidden decoration" and was very popular in the early Ming period, at least in part because of the Yongle emperor's (reigned 1403 - 1424) taste for plain white wares. Dishes of this type, noticeably thinner than the majority of porcelains produced during the reign of the Ming emperor Yongle, are known as eggshell porcelain. A few examples of these porcelains with impressed decoration have the Yongle reign mark in archaic characters incorporated in their designs; the attribution of these very thin dishes to the Yongle period is based on this mark.
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