Li

Li Chinese Tripod Jar This Li is a Chinese Tripod Jar dating more than 4,000 years ago. Tripod vessels appear in China in the early Neolithic period ...
Chinese Ceramics
Li Chinese Tripod Jar
A Tour of the Queensland Art Gallery
A Tour of Museums  in Australia
Australian Proverbs and Quotes
Chinese Ceramics: From the Neolithic to the Qing Dynasty
The Spirit and Form of Ancient Chinese Ceramics : Gallery Tour

Queensland Art Gallery - Chinese Tripod Jar

This “Li” is a Chinese Tripod Jar dating more than 4,000 years ago. Tripod vessels appear in China in the early Neolithic period of 7000 BCE. The innovation of hollow legs, creating Li (鬲) tripods, appeared during the middle Neolithic from 5000 BCE.

Historians ascribe significance to the shape of the tripod legs as being suggestive of goats’ or cows’ udders and, therefore, crucial for rituals.

Pottery as cooking or storage vessels, made of clay and hardened by heat, was the first functional art to emerge during the Paleolithic.

At the time, this masterpiece was created, ceramic technology-enabled vessels such as this to be placed directly in a fire without cracking.

The scorching and soot found on excavated examples of Li tripods is evidence that they were placed directly into the fire where their contents could be cooked more effectively than previous vessels.

This shape was popular for many centuries before being replicated in bronze. During the Bronze Age, the form was merged with that of Ding (鼎) tripods to create a hybrid ritual object.  

Eventually, the classic udder shape of the Li disappeared, as metallurgy and cooking techniques progressed.

Chinese Ceramics

Chinese ceramics show a continuous development since the Neolithic period and are one of the most significant forms of Chinese art.

The first pottery was made during the Palaeolithic era. Chinese Ceramics range from hand-built pottery vessels fired in bonfires or kilns, to the advanced Chinese porcelain wares made for the imperial court and export.

Porcelain is so identified with China that it is still called “china” in everyday English usage.

Pottery dating from 20,000 years ago was found at a Cave site, in Jiangxi province, making it among the earliest pottery yet found.

By the Middle and Late Neolithic, about 5000 to 1500 BCE, most of the more significant archaeological cultures in China were of settled farmer communities who produced a variety of attractive and often large vessels, often boldly painted, or decorated by cutting or impressing.

The decoration was in the abstract or stylized animals. During the 4th millennium, the potter’s wheel seems to have been a Chinese invention, though several regions to the West also claim the honor.

Previously coil-forming was used for large vessels. Ancient Ceramic vessel discoveries are mostly from burial sites, and they sometimes hold the remains of honor ancestors.

Li – Chinese Tripod Jar

  • Title:                 Li – Chinese Tripod Jar
  • Dates:               2,300 – 2,000 BCE
  • Culture:            Shanxi Longshan
  • Origins:            China
  • Material:          Earthenware
  • Museum:         Queensland Art Gallery

A Tour of the Queensland Art Gallery

  • Li – Chinese Tripod Jar
  • “Figure with Snow Falling” by Takahashi Hiroaki
  • “Figure with Parasol, Protect against Snow” by Takahashi Hiroaki
  • “Under the Jacaranda” by R Godfrey Rivers
  • “Bathing Hour” (L’Heure de Bain) by E Phillips Fox
  • Buddha
  • “Three Dancers at a Dance Class” by Edgar Degas
  • “La Fontaine” by Rupert Bunny
  • Masterpieces and Historical Objects in the Queensland Art Gallery

A Tour of Museums  in Australia

  • Museums in Sydney
    • Art Gallery of New South Wales
    • Australian Museum
    • Australian National Maritime Museum
    • Museum of Sydney
    • Powerhouse Museum
    • Hyde Park Barracks, Sydney
    • Nicholson Museum
    • Norman Lindsay Gallery and Museum
    • Museum of Fire
  • Museums in Melbourne
    • National Gallery of Victoria
    • Melbourne Museum
    • Shrine of Remembrance
    • Hellenic Museum, Melbourne
    • State Library of Victoria
    • National Sports Museum
    • Old Treasury Building, Melbourne
    • Old Melbourne Gaol
    • Chinese Museum, Melbourne
    • Jewish Museum of Australia
  • Museums in Canberra
    • National Museum of Australia
    • National Gallery of Australia
    • Australian War Memorial
    • National Portrait Gallery
  • Museums in Brisbane
    • Queensland Art Gallery
    • Queensland Museum & Science Centre
    • MacArthur Museum Brisbane
    • RD Milns Antiquities Museum
    • Queensland Maritime Museum
    • Commissariat Store, Brisbane
    • Queensland Police Museum
  • Museums in Perth
    • Art Gallery of Western Australia
    • WA Shipwrecks Museum
    • Perth Mint
    • WA Maritime Museum
    • Fremantle Prison
  • Museums in Adelaide
    • Art Gallery of South Australia
    • South Australian Museum
    • Migration Museum, Adelaide
  • Museums in Hobart
    • Museum of Old and New Art (MONA)
    • Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery
  • Museums in Darwin
    • Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory
    • Darwin Military Museum
    • Australian Aviation Heritage Centre

Australian Proverbs and Quotes

  • Australian Proverbs and Quotes
  • Australian Aboriginal Sayings and Quotes

Chinese Ceramics: From the Neolithic to the Qing Dynasty

The Spirit and Form of Ancient Chinese Ceramics : Gallery Tour

~~~

“A bird does not sing because it has an answer. It sings because it has a song.”
– Chinese Proverb

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Photo Credit: GM

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8 March 2020, 03:45 | Views: 3060

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