Pair of Teabowls with Bamboo. 1723–1735. China. Porcelain painted in underglaze blue and overglaze enamels (doucai) These eggshell-thin bowls represent an exquisite example of the technique known as doucai (dovetailing or contending colors), in which underglaze-blue outlines are partly filled with overglaze enamel colors. Outlines of bamboo were painted in cobalt and covered with a transparent glaze before firing. The leaves were then colored with pale green, yellow, and red enamels, and the bowls refired at a lower , which remains green throughout the year and whose hollow s


Pair of Teabowls with Bamboo. 1723–1735. China. Porcelain painted in underglaze blue and overglaze enamels (doucai) These eggshell-thin bowls represent an exquisite example of the technique known as doucai (dovetailing or contending colors), in which underglaze-blue outlines are partly filled with overglaze enamel colors. Outlines of bamboo were painted in cobalt and covered with a transparent glaze before firing. The leaves were then colored with pale green, yellow, and red enamels, and the bowls refired at a lower , which remains green throughout the year and whose hollow stems bend without breaking, has traditionally been viewed in China as a poignant image of human resilience. The elegant depiction of nature on these teabowls was undoubtedly inspired by China’s long tradition of bamboo paintings on silk and paper.


Size: 3000px × 1713px
Photo credit: © WBC ART / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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