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White Pottery
White
pottery is a kind of pottery whose outside and inside are all white. The
greenware is mostly made by hand. It uses porcelain clay or kaolinite, which
contain less iron than figuline, and is fired at a temperature of about 1000 ¡æ.
In the late Shang
Dynasty (13th century - 11th century BC), the
emergence and application of white pottery with carved patterns marked the new
achievement in the history of Chinese pottery. The hardness, fire resistance and
water-absorbing capacity saw much improvement, so we consider the white pottery
the indication of the leap from pottery to china.
A white pottery vase with geometrical patterns of the Shang Dynasty was
excavated from the Yin
Ruins in Anyang
of Henan
Province, and it is the representative of white pottery with carved patterns
in the Shang Dynasty. It is 20 centimeters tall in total with a caliber of 18.5
centimeters, and was made by imitating the pattern of bronze
ware. The body of the vase is spherical, the mouth becomes narrow, and the
pitch at the shoulder part is large. The bottom is round with a ring foot. The
whole work looks rounded and stately. The body of the vase is covered with
patterns. The main patterns in rilievi and the detailed shadings form a florid
design. The concave and protuberant, the distant and dense patterns were
naturally combined to create a clear gradation. Now the vase is in the Palace
Museum.
Due to the hardness, lustration, and fine craftsmanship, white potteries
became the objects used exclusively by slaveholders. In the later period of the
Shang Dynasty, white potteries tended to be more and more fussy and refined, so
the top-notch white potteries were mostly from this period. After the Western Zhou
Dynasty (11th century - 771BC), white pottery was in decline due to the
emergence of hard pottery with printed patterns and primitive
china.
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