Chinese pottery and porcelain : an account of the potter's art in China from primitive times to the present day . o r>. I oc uO • ^5 .^fe U W30 CM ^CQ •otsj -^ XI • o =s 3 (U •cc : J- ce s > OS? . s « W O > ^?=•=? >. ^ li « e * a; C ^— flj Ji D O u C ^ u ^ S ^ o ,^ « u X i; >- — •• ^ « fe ^ — ^u .t: U -3 U ^ ^ i: ^ n~S. i - ?^ t i. o «> i> c. c.» S UU ^I I ?** L The Tang Dynasty, 618-906 33 looks like a piece of late Persian embroidery. And is not the artof the Tang painters essentially modern in the directness of itsappeal ? The truth is, our knowledge of Tang po


Chinese pottery and porcelain : an account of the potter's art in China from primitive times to the present day . o r>. I oc uO • ^5 .^fe U W30 CM ^CQ •otsj -^ XI • o =s 3 (U •cc : J- ce s > OS? . s « W O > ^?=•=? >. ^ li « e * a; C ^— flj Ji D O u C ^ u ^ S ^ o ,^ « u X i; >- — •• ^ « fe ^ — ^u .t: U -3 U ^ ^ i: ^ n~S. i - ?^ t i. o «> i> c. c.» S UU ^I I ?** L The Tang Dynasty, 618-906 33 looks like a piece of late Persian embroidery. And is not the artof the Tang painters essentially modern in the directness of itsappeal ? The truth is, our knowledge of Tang pottery has only justbegun, and now that the ware is esteemed in Europe at its properworth, the choicer specimens which have been treasured in Chinaare finding their way westward. Every fresh arrival tells us some-thing new and surprising, and it only wanted such a piece as Fig. 1,Plate 10, to establish the identity of the specimens whose Tangorigin we had before only ventured to conjecture. Here we havea form of dish which is found among the tomb wares of the Tangperiod, made of the t


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhobsonrl, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1915