Photo of collection object Wine Flask with Incised and Sgraffito Peony Design
Wine Flask with Incised and Sgraffito Peony Design, 1500s. stoneware with incised design (Buncheong ware), Overall: 22.6 cm (8 7/8 in.). Gift of John L. Severance, 1921.649. CC0.

Wine Flask with Incised and Sgraffito Peony Design

1500s

Maker Unknown

Korean Art

Wine Flask with Incised and Sgraffito Peony Design, 1500s. Korea, Joseon dynasty (1392-1910). Stoneware with incised design (Buncheong ware); overall: 22.6 cm (8 7/8 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of John L. Severance 1921.649 Produced in both central and provincial kilns during during the 1400s–1500s, buncheong (literally means "powdered green"), like this wine flask commonly feature gray-green glaze due to the usage of less processed and refined clay high in iron. Many experimental techniques such as white slip, inlay, stamping, and incising, which had been explored and perfected in the Goryeo period, were also adopted for buncheong pottery. The artist for this work extensively used the incising technique to draw both floral and abstract patterns. The term buncheong, which refers to this type of pottery, means "powdered gray-green glazed ceramics.”
Maker/Artist
Maker Unknown
Classification
Ceramic
Formatted Medium
stoneware with incised design (Buncheong ware)
Dimensions
Overall: 22.6 cm (8 7/8 in.)
Departments
Korean Art
Accession Number
1921.649
Credit Line
Gift of John L. Severance
Rights Statement
CC0

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