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Tang Sancai Colored Glazed
Pottery
When a railway was under construction in 1899, many pieces of
exquisite pottery were unearthed from tombs of the Tang Dynasty near
Luoyang, Henan Province. The pieces of pottery were in yellow, green
and white colors or in yellow, green and brown colors. Since they
were unearthed from tombs of the Tang Dynasty, they were called
"Tang tri-colored glazed pottery".
The production of glazed pottery in China dates back to ancient
times. Single color glazed pottery appeared during the Han Dynasty.
Fine glazed pottery was made during the Tang Dynasty. The craftsmen
mastered metallic oxide property and coloring mechanism. They
applied glaze of different colors to a single article, creating the
Tang tri-colored glazed pottery with unique artistic effects.
The base of pottery was made of kaolin, a kind of fine clay. After
the base was shaped and dried by airing, it was baked in a kiln.
Then the base was glazed and baked in the kiln again. Minerals of
different metallic elements were mixed with glaze. With lead as a
flux, the glaze was applied to the surface of the base. When the
base was baked, the metallic oxides of different colors melted in
the glaze and spread around.
The various colors of glaze appeared with the interaction of
different metallic elements. Copper, iron, manganese and cobalt
elements showed green, yellow, purple and blue colors separately.
The difference in the content of various metallic elements also
showed different colors. All this brought about a great variety of
magnificent glaze.
Colored glaze was usually not applied to the head of a pottery
figurine. After the base was baked, a few touches of Chinese ink
were painted to feature the eyes, eyebrows and beard. The facial
expression and inner world of a figurine were portrayed most
vividly.
Tang tri-colored glazed pottery was baked in the kiln at a low
temperature. It was fragile and not well watertight. So it was far
inferior to porcelain in practical value. What we see today are
pieces of Tang tri-colored glazed pottery used as burial objects.
Lavish funerals prevailed during the Tang Dynasty. Exquisite pieces
of tri-colored glazed pottery were burial objects favored by the
nobility and the common people.
There are a great variety of Tang tri-colored glazed pottery pieces.
With unique shapes, they had the rich flavor of life. They covered
almost every field of life related to the dead, from models of
architecture to plates, bowls and other articles of everyday use,
from horses, carriages to toys, from figurines of beautiful noble
ladies to those of the heavenly kings with a fiery temper. They
displayed the colorful social life and the splendid culture of the
Tang Dynasty.
When we wipe the thick dirt from the Tang tri-colored glazed
pottery, we can see the gorgeous glaze color. What they display is a
picture scroll of the colorful social life during the Tang Dynasty.
[ Chronology of China ] [ Reign Marks ] [ Han Dynasty ] [ Tang Dynasty ] [ Qing Dynasty ] [ Tang Glazed Pottery ] [ Tang Sancai ] [ Tang Sancai News ] [ Lacquer Ware ] [ Chinese Treasures ] [ Chinese Ceramics ] [ Chinese Dragon ] [ Ancient Figurines ] [ Mud Figures ] [ Shoushan Stone ] [ Ming qi ] [ Lokapalas ] [ Snuff Bottles ] [ Wucai Hand Drawing ] [ Tang Camel ] [ Tang Horse ] [ Avalokitesvara, Guanyin ] [ The 8 Immortals ] [ Famille Rose & Famille Verte ] [ Flower Symbology ]
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