A Rare Imperial Yellow Ming Pottery Goutou Tile Terminal, Late 14th or Early 15th Century.

A rare Imperial Yellow Ming Pottery Goutou tile terminal, late 14th or early 15th century, perhaps made in Zhubaoshan near Yuhuatai, South Nanjing, Jiangsu province. The circular roundel is moulded with an Imperial ‘Five Claw Dragon’.

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Condition
This is not the whole, there would have been a large plan section to the upper back. The surface is worn, the glaze is a bit degraded and there is a chip to the dragons mouth.
Size
Diameter : 16.3 cm (6 1/3 inches).
Provenance
From a Ming Imperial building.
Stock number
134
References
For similar Imperial Ming pottery tiles see : Catalogue of Late Yuan and Ming Ceramics in the British Museum (Jessica Harrison-Hall.The British Museum Press, 2001. ISBN 0-7141-1488-X) pages 521-523

Photos

Information

Ming Pottery Roof Tiles / Liuli Wa :
According to traditional Chinese belief, roofs are platforms of communication between the words of the living and spirit realms. Consequently they were decorated to ward off evil and to act as a magnet for blessings and good fortune. Marco Polo was struck by the visual effect of these brightly coloured tiles, remarking while describing Khubilai Khan`s palace at Dadu (modern day Beijing) The roof is all ablaze with scarlet and green and blue and yellow and all the colours that are, so brilliant varnished that it glitters like crystal and the sparkle of it can be seen from far away. The Chinese had made ceramic tiles from early times but it was the Ming dynasty that saw the largest period of production, much of this was based in Shanxi Province at small family run kilns that passed down from generation to generation. Glazed tile-work is known in China as Liuli Wa, literally `roof-tile of glass`, a term dating back to the Tang Dynasty (618-906) although Tang tiles are now very rare. The soft earthenware used to make Ming tiles varies but often is uneven in its constitution with lots of grog. The tiles were mould made with a large amount of hand working, giving a completely hand-made look with lots of sharp detail and undercutting. They were lead glaze and low fired which means the glaze often runs. There were two basic colour schemes used Sancai (greens,yellows and browns) and the darker palette of Fahau (turquoise, blue and purple). The dating of Chinese glazed tiles, which were made over a long period of time with little change, is difficult. Knowing when the building they came from was build doesn’t help as tiles, exposed to the elements, needed replacing from time to time and so a building might contain tiles made over several centuries. However an approximate chronology can be understood, and with the study tile construction replacements can be identified as being different to the genuine Ming examples.

 

A Related Ming Pottery Tile From the Forbidden City

A rare fragmentary imperial Dishui tile from the Forbidden City, Beijing, Yongle period 1402 – 1424. This eave-end tile known in Chinese as a ‘water-dripper’ shows an imperial five claw dragon chasing a flaming pearl. The finely moulded design is glazed with a high flux lead-glaze coloured with yellow to denote it was made for an imperial building. From the Forbidden City, Beijing.

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A rare fragmentary imperial Dishui tile from the Forbidden City, Beijing, Yongle period 1402 – 1424. This eave-end tile known in Chinese as a ‘water-dripper’ shows an imperial five claw dragon chasing a flaming pearl. The finely moulded design is glazed with a high flux lead-glaze coloured with yellow to denote it was made for an imperial building. From the Forbidden City, Beijing.