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Song Blue and White Porcelain on the Silk Road
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Western scholars of ancient Chinese ceramics have long thought blue and white porcelain manufactured before the Ming (1368-1644 A.D.), dates to the Yuan (1279-1368 A.D.). Even in China today these ...
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25 July 2012

Western scholars of ancient Chinese ceramics have long thought blue and white porcelain manufactured before the Ming (1368-1644 A.D.), dates to the Yuan (1279-1368 A.D.). Even in China today these porcelains are still termed “Yuan Blue and White.” Based upon first-hand surveys of sites in Inner Mongolia, Adam T. Kessler’s Song Blue and White Porcelain on the Silk Road demonstrates that blue and white was made during the Song (960-1279 A.D.) ended up in the hands of the Xi Xia (1038-1226 A.D.) and the Jin (1115-1234 A.D.). Blue and white found today in hoards was buried prior to Mongol invasions of China in the 1200s. Sites from the Philippines to Egypt have yielded Song blue and white. Also reviewed is the cobalt-bearing ore used by Song China to create blue and white.
Price: $345.00
Pages: 664
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Studies in Asian Art and Archaeology
Publication Date:
25 July 2012
ISBN: 9789004218598
Format: Hardcover
'a study that all scholars of Chinese porcelain, and some in the Chinese art field, especially art that has come to our attention through excavation sites, will have to reckon with.'
Nancy Shatzman Steinhardt, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 25/1 (2015)
Nancy Shatzman Steinhardt, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 25/1 (2015)
Adam T. Kessler, Ph.D. (1989) in the Inter-departmental Program for Archaeology, UCLA. He was creator and Curator of the 1994-1997 exhibition Empires Beyond the Great Wall: the Heritage of Genghis Khan (United States, Canada, New Zealand). Since 2000, he has worked as an independent scholar.