When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: antique chinese celadon vase

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Longquan celadon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longquan_celadon

    The "mallet" vase was a special favourite at Longquan, often with handles formed as animals or dragons. [20] Funerary vases, made in pairs, also often feature charmingly stylized animals, usually tigers and dragons, curled around the shoulders of the vessel. These were used in southern Chinese burial custom to store provisions for the afterlife ...

  3. Ge ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ge_ware

    Ge-type vase, with "gold thread and iron wire" double crackle, ... Wade–Giles: Ko-yao) is a type of celadon or greenware in Chinese pottery.

  4. Celadon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celadon

    Celadon (/ ˈ s ɛ l ə d ɒ n /) is a term for pottery denoting both wares glazed in the jade green celadon color, also known as greenware or "green ware" (the term specialists now tend to use), [1] and a type of transparent glaze, often with small cracks, that was first used on greenware, but later used on other porcelains.

  5. Rare Chinese vase found in Indian Hill home sells for ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/rare-chinese-vase-found-indian...

    The "elegant light-blue," 6-inch vase sold for almost 300 times its pre-sale estimate in the Chinese and Himalayan Works of Art sale. The piece was initially estimated conservatively at $1,500 to ...

  6. Ru ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ru_ware

    The shapes include dishes, probably used as brush-washers, cups, wine bottles (carafes in modern terms), small vases, and censers and incense-burners. They can be considered as a particular form of celadon wares. [3] Ru ware represents one of the Five Great Kilns identified by later Chinese writers. The wares were reserved for the Imperial ...

  7. Guan ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guan_ware

    Small Guan bowl on legs (some 3 inches across), with pronounced type 3 glaze crackle Mallet-shaped vase, Guan ware, 12th–13th century, with type 1 crackle. Guan ware or Kuan ware (Chinese: 官窯; pinyin: guān yáo; Wade–Giles: kuan-yao) is one of the Five Famous Kilns of Song dynasty China, making high-status stonewares, whose surface decoration relied heavily on crackled glaze, randomly ...