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SOUTHEAST ASIAN OBJECTS FROM THE COLLECTION
BURMA (MYANMAR)
Sculpture from Burma (Myanmar)
CAMBODIA
Sculpture from Cambodia
INDONESIA
Sculpture from Indonesia
THAILAND
Sculpture from Thailand
Ceramics from Thailand
VIETNAM
Ceramics from Vietnam
Storage Jar
Vietnam, possibly Champa; 15th - 16th century
Stoneware with incised design under glaze (Go-Sanh ware)
H. 13 1/8 in. (33.3 cm); D. 12 in. (30.5 cm)
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller 3rd Collection of Asian Art
1979.096
The lugs on the top of this jar were most likely used to tie down some type of cover, suggesting that this jar was used for storage. Shards discovered in 1974 near the kiln site at Go-sanh and in other nearby villages in central Vietnam provide interesting parallels to this jar's golden-brown glaze, to its reddish body, and to the method of the incised decoration of the free-flowing chrysanthemums beneath the glaze. From 192 to 1471, Go-sanh and the surrounding area of central Vietnam was ruled by the Champa kingdom, although the kilns at Go-sanh more than likely produced their distinctive products for centuries after the political extinction of the Cham state. The strategic location of Champa along the Vietnamese coast made it a port-of-call on the trade routes that linked mainland Southeast Asia with Indonesia, China, and other parts of the world from at least the 8th century on. A container such as this may have been made to serve as storage on the sea trade routes.
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