This style of very rare black earthenware
amphorae was produced from the Warring States
period and throughout the Han Dynasty. The
reign of the Han Dynasty is commonly
considered within China to be one of the greatest
periods in its entire history. As a result, the
members of the ethnic majority of Chinese
people to this day still call themselves "People of
Han," in honor of the Liu family and the dynasty
they created. An alternative term Chinese people
often use is the term "Descendants of the
Dragon" as a sign of ethnic identity. During the
Han Dynasty, China officially became a Confucian
state and prospered domestically: agriculture,
handicrafts and commerce flourished, and the
population reached 50 million. Meanwhile, the
empire extended its political and cultural
influence over Vietnam, Central Asia, Mongolia,
and Korea before it finally collapsed under a
combination of domestic and external pressures.
In his work regarding these wares, Krahl states
that amphorae of this distinct type are
characteristic products of Western Sichuan
province where they were made by non-Chinese
peoples. Hence, this type of vessel is known as
Lifan, named after the area of Sichuan province
in the far west of China in which such jars have
been found.
The everted mouth opens elliptically as if it were
two human lips opening to receive liquid
refreshment in large quantity. The corners of the
mouth form two pointed spouts opposite one
another from which the liquid contents might
have been poured out. This angular shape
follows from the corners of the mouth down the
elegantly curved and tapered, almost almond
shaped neck of the vessel. The neck itself is
decorated with three rows of short vertical
engraved lines that encircle the neck in the form
of a shapely chocker. On either side, the angular
neck fades into the large round belly of the jar
toward the middle where it meets one of a
number of very unusual polychrome appliqué
metal bosses or studs that decorate the curved
features of the body and the handles of the
vessel in a symmetrical fashion; giving the
impression of eyes and other zoomorphic
features to the jug and bringing it all the more to
life in the eye of the beholder. These studs
would have burst forth from the bright and shiny
black burnished body in a pyrotechnic display of
color. It is clear that each of these studs would
have had a different color whether bronze, blue,
red, silver or gilt.
The zoomorphic imagery of this beautiful and
exotic creature has been enhanced by the potter
who has engraved four symmetrically placed
large deeply molded spirals that form two
exaggerated crescent swirls on each side of the
vessel from whichever direction we choose to
view from. Might these be the eyes or perhaps
arms or even wings?
The vessel has two strong broad smoothly
arched handles that emanate from either side of
the jar’s elliptical mouth and flow down to join
themselves seamlessly to either side of the lower
center of the vessel’s body (at 90 degree angles
towards the tapering neck). Toward the top of
each arm there remains a bronze stud one of
these still has blue decorative pigment traces the
other a thick red-brown pigment. Each of the
arms also has markings that indicate where two
more such studs would have been superficially
fixed and have now come off with wear and time,
but without damaging the earthenware itself in
any way. The base of the jig is recessed creating
a relatively shallow foot ring.
It is noteworthy that many stylistic similarities
occur between these Lifan and much earlier
periods and cultures such as the Neolithic
cultures of Machang (circa 3000-2000 B.C.) and
Xindian (circa 1500 B.C.). Similar blackware food
containers with two handles have also been
unearthed in Dena County, Yunan, an area that
was the home of the Southwestern Yi tribe
during the spring and Autumn Period (770-476
BC). The surface of the vessel has then been
shaped with tools and then burnished. This
process of manufacture gives the jar its beautiful
rugged, yet carefully detailed distinctive
characteristics. As most apparent from the inside
of the mouth and neck of the jar, the surface of
the amphora was originally highly burnished to
give a shiny black sheen. The surface of the body
is an amalgamation of complex curves and
convex and concave shapes. These
characteristics, in addition to the unusual
presence of symmetrically attached bronze
bosses on the sides and handles, make this piece
extraordinary and particularly rare.
Comparable Literature: S.J. Vainker, Chinese
Pottery and Porcelain from Prehistory to Present,
New York, George Braziller, Inc., 1991.
Oriental Ceramics. The World's Great Collections,
1974, Vol.5, no.1
Krahl, Chinese Ceramics from the Meiyintang
Collection, 1994, Vol.1, no.65.
Yuegutang, A Collection of Chinese Ceramics in
Berlin (Regina Krahl, G+H Verlag Berlin,2000)
Item 35 Page 55.