Tomb jar
Label Text
This tall slender tomb jar from the Southern Song dynasty is one of eight such elaborately decorated vessels that Freer displayed as pairs in the Peacock Room in Detroit. He purchased this example from the New York gallery of Yamanaka and Company, and he was told that it and other "specimens of this kind" had been "recovered from ancient Buddhist tombs" in Korea. While that was probably true, this particular jar is now known to be Chinese in origin and to date to the thirteenth century. Originally an accoutrement of burial in China as well as Korea, it would have been paired with another jar of the same shape, both of which would have held funeral offerings of grain meant to assist the deceased in the afterlife.
Object Name
Tomb jar
Ware
Qingbai ware
Dated
13th century
Period
Southern Song dynasty
Medium
Porcelain with bluish transparent (qingbai) glaze
Dimensions
HxW: 36.3 x 11.3 cm
Country
China
Credit Line
Gift of Charles Lang Freer
Iteration
2
Shelf Number
39
Wall
North
Title
Tomb jar
Object Number
F1904.321
Freer Source
Yamanaka and Co.
Freer Source City
New York
Freer Source State
New York
Freer Source Country
United States
Image
http://141.217.97.109/plugins/Dropbox/files/peacock-jpg/JPEG/F1904.321.jpg
Collection
Citation
"Tomb jar," in The Peacock Room, Freer Gallery of Art, Smithsonian Institution, Accession No. F1904.321, Item #3121, https://peacockroom.wayne.edu/items/show/3121 (accessed November 21, 2024).