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A DARK BROWN GLAZED STONEWARE ‘RABBIT’ LIME POT, ANGKOR PERIOD
奥地利
09月12日 下午5点 开拍 / 09月10日 下午3点 截止委托
拍品描述

Description

A DARK BROWN GLAZED STONEWARE ‘RABBIT’ LIME POT, ANGKOR PERIOD

Khmer Empire, 11th-13th century. The globular body, supported on a short circular foot and rising to a gently tapered mouth, decorated on one side with the emerging head of a stylized rabbit, distinguished by long upright ears, bulging eyes, and finely incised whiskers, and on the opposite side, with the subtly suggested tail of the animal. The small jar covered in an opaque dark brown glaze stopping unevenly above the foot, revealing the underlying buff-colored ware.

Provenance: Private collection of A. Hansen, Denmark. Mr. Hansen (b. 1955) is a retired Danish Supreme Court lawyer and lifelong collector with a deep passion for history and culture. His collecting journey began at the age of eight with stamps, encouraged by his father, and quickly developed into a serious pursuit. By 1982, his specialized collection of Greenland postal history earned international recognition. Following this success, Mr. Hansen turned his focus to fine art and antiquities, beginning with Danish art and later expanding into East and Southeast Asian artifacts after an inspiring Japanese exhibition in 1985. Over the following decades, his collection grew to include mostly ceramic artworks from Annam, Khmer, Burmese, and Thai origins, acquired through reputable collectors and auction houses.
Condition: Good condition, commensurate with age, with ancient wear and expected firing irregularities, signs of oxidation and fine craquelure to the glaze, sparse minor nibbling, and some areas with soil encrustation.

Weight: 231.8 g
Dimensions: Length 9.1 cm

By the late 6th or early 7th century, Khmer potters adopted the potter’s wheel, greatly improving vessel production. A Khmer inscription from 674 even compares the act of creation to the turning of the wheel. Early ceramics were occasionally decorated with slip and pigment, a practice largely abandoned after 800 AD with the rise of glazed stoneware.

The first glazed ceramics in Southeast Asia outside of direct Chinese influence appeared under Khmer kings Indravarman I and Yasovarman I (ca. 880–940). By the 11th century, Khmer wares featured refined, gray-toned clay and the introduction of zoomorphic motifs, such as the stylized rat on the present vessel. After 1100, animal-shaped containers often displayed applied moldings, incised patterns, and glossy brown glazes, with gourd-shaped forms becoming especially popular.

Khmer potters made animal-shaped containers and lidded small jars to be used for holding lime paste, one of the ingredients in the betel quid. Made from areca nut and lime paste wrapped in a fresh betel leaf, the betel quid was chewed as a digestive and stimulant but also had an important role in hospitality and in social and religious rituals. Pottery containers for lime paste were made in graduated sizes, for use by individuals or larger groups, and glazed with both green and brown glazes.

Literature comparison:
Compare a related brown glazed rabbit lime pot, Khmer Empire (present-day Cambodia), dated 12th-13th century, 8.8 cm long, in the Ashmolean Museum Oxford, accession number EA1969.3. Compare a related lime-paste jar in the form of a rabbit with a lid, Khmer Empire (present-day Cambodia or Northeast Thailand), dated 1075-1250, 13.2 cm long, in the Smithsonian National Museum of Asian Art, accession number S1996.170a-b. Compare a related lime-paste jar in the form of a bird, with a lid, Khmer Empire (present-day Cambodia or Northeast Thailand), dated 1177-1430, 11.3 cm long, in the Smithsonian National Museum of Asian Art, accession number S1996.172a-b.

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价格信息

拍品估价:250 - 500 欧元 起拍价格:250 欧元  买家佣金: 35.00%

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