Skip to main content

Small Lobed Jar

1500-1699

Scroll

Small Lobed Jar

1500-1699

Physical Qualities Fritware with white glaze, 2 3/4 H x 2 Diam. in. (7 x 5.1 cm.)
Credit Line Gift of Richard and Elizabeth S. Ettinghausen in Memory of Adelyn D. Breeskin
Object Number 2013.211
According to written accounts confirmed by archaeological finds, imported Chinese ceramics were widely available throughout the Abbasid period (749–1055). Potters in Iraq and Iran imitated Chinese white stoneware by covering their 9th–10th century buff or red earthenware with white slip. During the 12th–14th century, potters in Iran rediscovered or revived an ancient Egyptian process of making a ceramic body predominantly of silica-rich quartz rather than clay as used in China. This material, called fritware or stonepaste, produced a harder and more durable ceramic body compared to the earthenwares.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by gift, 2013 (on extended loan from 1957); Elizabeth Ettinghausen, Princeton, NJ; Richard S. Ettinghausen
Extended Loans IN

Art Across Asia: West Asian Connections

Explore the Collection Further

Jian kilns
Small Covered Jar
1100–1299
Small Jar
1899–1932
Lobed Jar
850–900
Small Jar with Fitted Cover and Stand
1769–1779
Cizhou kilns
Small Food Storage Jar with Flower Design
1400–1599
Small Jar
1824–1834
Small Jar with Four Strap Handles
701–800
Small Jar with Dappled Glazes
701–733
Small Jar
401–600
Lobed Food Storage Jar
901–1099
Erika Blumenfeld
Plate No. B20645 (Small Magellanic Cloud) from the portfolio "Tracing Luminaries"
2021
Erika Blumenfeld
Plate No. I6914 (Small Magellanic Cloud) from the portfolio "Tracing Luminaries"
2021