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The David Vases

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The David Vases are the best-known porcelain vases in the world because of the rare inscriptions around their necks, dating them to precisely AD 1351. When first discovered they were believed to be the oldest dated example of blue-and-white porcelain in the world. They are named after their most famous owner, Sir Percival David (1892-1964), who built-up one of the world's greatest Chinese ceramic collections. They were originally altar vases, commissioned by a man called Zhang Wenjin, and presented as an offering to a Daoist temple.

Who created the first blue-and-white porcelain?

The David Vases were made during the reign of the foreign Yuan dynasty (1279-1368), when China was at the heart of a vast Mongol Empire. Trade flourished between China and the Middle East and cobalt, used to create the blue effect, came from the other side of the empire in Iran. Archaeologists have unearthed materials which now show that Yuan dynasty blue-and-white porcelain was made for several different markets, rather than solely for export as was once thought. Different consumers demanded specific forms, sizes and designs.

Porcelain that is fired without glazing is known as bisque, or biscuit-fired

Like a wonderful language

What I love is actually the early history. The blue dye, the cobalt, came originally from Iran, or Persia: Persian blue. So you have a wonderful sort of Persian and Turkish Iznik pottery which is very free and splendid, and then the Chinese bought it and were thrilled, in about the ninth and tenth century, and developed it to perfection by the twelfth and thirteenth century. And they of course adapt it for their shrines with the dragons and the sacred symbols.

Then it comes to Europe and the Dutch adapt it to their life, and so it comes to Britain and we adapt it to the forms of jugs we like, the plates we love, and so on. So it retained this sort of status and then it has become a tradition, and then it became adapted again so you get these strange mixes in the eighteenth century; you get wonderful sort of Chinese landscapes with pagodas and willows, and perfectly ordinary English couples walking among them. It becomes translated, it’s like a wonderful language which is perpetually translated to the culture where it’s arriving and is loved.

I think the fascinating thing about these vases is that they are so beautiful and mysterious with that curling dragon and their elephant handles, and yet they seem tremendously familiar; they seem like an object you have known all your life simply because they have had this great legacy, as it were, of repetition and reflection down through the centuries.

Jenny Uglow, biographer, critic and publisher

Vigorous and powerful porcelain

These vases are in the shape of metal objects; the shape that they are in would have originally been made in bronze rather than in ceramic, and of course it’s possible that people looking at them saw them as an inferior substitute for bronze which was almost certainly a more expensive and lavish metal. So in a way you’ve got decorative exuberance here substituting for preciousness of material, so I think its quite possible that seeing these on an altar piece with a very prominent inscription – the man who paid for them made sure that we know what his name was and how he paid for them – some people may have thought ‘gee this is amazing’ but some people may have thought, you know, this is a bit flash – this is a bit vulgar.

To specialists in the field they are enormously famous and revered. I don’t think they are the most beautiful pieces of porcelain – they’re vigorous and they’re powerful. I think Zhang Wenjin, the man who paid for them, got value for money because they stand up and they say ‘look at us’, we’re rather big and splendid and therefore the man who paid for us must be important too.

I don’t think they fit into the modern domestic interior, and they’re certainly not the most beautiful pieces of Yuan porcelain, but they will always be important, they’ll always be significant, and I think there will always be more questions to ask about them.

Craig Clunas, Professor of the History of Art, University of Oxford

The most famous porcelains in the world

The David Vases are the most famous porcelains in the world. Looking at them makes me think about the ubiquitous nature of blue-and-white ceramics, about the importance of the discovery of porcelain and what an amazing impact it has had across the globe. I can imagine the time when they were made and what China must have been like towards the end of the Yuan dynasty. Finally my thoughts turn to the decipherment and interpretation of the texts around their necks.

Potters fired white porcelain in China from about 600 AD. Merchants from the Middle-East introduced blue-and-white designs to China in the Tang dynasty (AD 618-906) and they were quickly copied and exported back using finer materials. It was not until about the 1320s that China became a centre for blue-and-white porcelain production.

Jingdezhen, where these vases were made, is one of the most important industrial centres in global history. Factory workers made these vases for an altar in a Daoist temple in China, but at the same time many of their colleagues were firing blue-and-white wares for export to the Middle East, Southeast Asia and Africa.

Without the invention and circulation of Chinese blue-and-white porcelain our homes would look quite different. Before Portuguese, Dutch and English traders shipped vast quantities of porcelains to Europe in the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries table wares were far rougher.

The arrival of porcelain in the West brought about a transformation in dining and in European ceramic production.

Jessica Harrison-Hall, curator, British Museum

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Comments

  • 4 comments
  • 1. At 13:49 on 1 July 2010, Paul Gerrard wrote:

    I have been meaning to comment for months but am finally prompted by yesterday's broadcast which was superb. I overheard some criticism on a 'Feedback' item a few months ago but I think the series is great. The plus points for me about this series are: the fantastic, mysterious music; a highly knowledgeable and witty but never 'too clever' commentator; fascinating insights from other experts (Susie Orbach a couple of weeks ago, Ben Okri yesterday); the light shed on our perceptions of the world. I thought yesterday's piece on the Nigerian brass castings was one of your best, especially given the careful cultural-historical points made (German anthropologist / Illustrated London News / today). I believe this series to be of great educational significance and I have learnt a huge amount from listening, usually in the morning but with the option to catch it later. Apparently some people just don't get what this series is doing on the radio - for me that's the magic, and I can check the website for an image of the object if I wish. One of the best ´óÏó´«Ã½ productions that I as a 59 year old have ever experienced. Inspirational. Thank you.

    Paul Gerrard

  • 2. At 00:45 on 2 July 2010, neilmud wrote:

    "From palaces to parlours throughout the world" here is my plate early English blue-and-white porcelain made for the lower/middle classes in the 16C http://www.bbc.co.uk/ahistoryoftheworld/objects/g9ievZ_qTVuoR5J4548t5A

  • 3. At 21:24 on 7 July 2010, and the pharaohs wrote:

    A correction is needed on this page - to "The David Vase are the best-known porcelain vases". 'nuff said?!

    Also, I listen to the podcasts and only recently discovered that there's a summary included - but perhaps a picture of the object would be more useful? It certainly would be to me as I'd have some idea of it - at present, I normally see the object after I've heard about it.

  • 4. At 09:18 on 12 July 2010, David Prudames wrote:

    -and the pharaohs
    Thanks for pointing out the typo, which is now corrected.
    David Prudames, British Museum

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Location

Made in China

Culture
Period

1351

Theme
Size
H:
63.6cm
W:
22cm
Colour
Material

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