Yellow lusterware bowl depicting a drinker , 10th century

This bowl features an image of a seated drinker, who is depicted in a rather naïve style. After a short period of experimenting with polychrome and two-colour lustre decoration, Abbasid potters settled on this yellow pigment. The reason may have been its greater dependability during the firing phase. The more likely reason, however, was that it resembled gold.
Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK. C.62-1981

Ausgestellt von

SilkRoadVirtualMuseum

Mehr von SilkRoadVirtualMuseum

Auspicious grain
Ink and Colour on Paper
SilkRoadVirtualMuseum
Dwelling in the Qingbian Mountains , 1366
Ink and Colour on Paper
SilkRoadVirtualMuseum
Thatched Cottage in Autumn Mountains , 1343
Ink and Colour on Paper
SilkRoadVirtualMuseum
Ge Zhichuan Relocating to the Mountains , 1360
SilkRoadVirtualMuseum
Cloudy Mountains , 1360s
Ink and Colour on Paper
SilkRoadVirtualMuseum