Posted 3 years ago
OpenAirAnt…
(1 item)
After a bit of a battle by online auction, I won this beautiful dish. I researched it and I think it might be a Southern Song Dynasty dish and what appears to be Guan type crackle. Am I on the right track?
very maybe later, but i don,t know i ever return to the site , we have to run this on sizzle effect ( shipwreck or agglutination )
, well at least i do what i promised i got no idea, I just don't understand any of this, what the hell is this , it is no kiln grit , some kind of sizzle effect (= agglutinatie effect maybe shipwreck)
there is almost no or almost ferro sedimentation and sedimentation is so meticulous , there is no spilling outside bottom rim and
the bottom is not beehive crackle , and the and the outside slope within starts with with an broking glas yuan type and the twin fish got an rather elevated application
and the Longuans got a spread until 1550 , actually i don,t see happen during for instance lets say for discussion sake the Zengde period or so
so i don,t know, i am way out my league , but i don,t buy , what don,t know
Thank you for your comment. I had it reviewed by an appraiser who confirmed that the design and foot rim is Song Dynasty but the crackles suggest it was made for the Southeast Asian market possibly 15th/16th Century Song but it might be a shipwreck piece as well. Very exciting....
the point is too get it authorised , and i am appraiser ,myself , iand i sell and buy only stuff where i am absolutely sure , , my collaques are better appraisers , and they were,nt sure
we have to stick to the question Southern Song around 1200, its hard to coincide with the known shipwrecks, when it is real , it value is around 650 dollar
send an photo to an auction house , and put in an reserve let,s 400 dollars and state for discussion sake you want to sell , probably the appraiser , has to see the piece life , and if he don,t want to see it, because he don,t trust it , he will refuse and bounce the piece
this is what he has to assess Southeast Asian Ceramic Society, Singapore. Arts Orientalis, Singapore.1979) page 176