WEKO3
アイテム
{"_buckets": {"deposit": "b9441102-7a7c-41e0-be04-44860e34eea3"}, "_deposit": {"created_by": 3, "id": "6977", "owners": [3], "pid": {"revision_id": 0, "type": "depid", "value": "6977"}, "status": "published"}, "_oai": {"id": "oai:tobunken.repo.nii.ac.jp:00006977", "sets": ["1201"]}, "author_link": ["28186", "28187"], "item_10001_biblio_info_7": {"attribute_name": "書誌情報", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"bibliographicIssueDates": {"bibliographicIssueDate": "1951-03-30", "bibliographicIssueDateType": "Issued"}, "bibliographicIssueNumber": "161", "bibliographicPageEnd": "19", "bibliographicPageStart": "1", "bibliographic_titles": [{"bibliographic_title": "美術研究"}, {"bibliographic_title": "The bijutsu kenkyu : the journal of art studies", "bibliographic_titleLang": "en"}]}]}, "item_10001_description_5": {"attribute_name": "抄録", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"subitem_description": " It is strange that the Hsiu Wu Yao, or Chiao Tso Yao, the most important. and particularly fine in the quality of products among the Chinese ceramic kilns. in the Northern Sung Dynasty, has not hitherto been known of its existence. The discovery of the Hsiu Wu Yao brought various problems, hitherto left unsettled, about important Northern Sung ceramic products, and proved a very significant center of the sort in the period, even more significant than the Ting Yao or Ju Yao.\n The writer learned the existence of this kiln site during his trip to Northern China in 1943, and has kept an eye on products from it ever since. A detailed information about it reached him through the Notes on the Wares from the Chiao Tso Potteries (Ethnos, No. 3, 1943) by Orvar Karlbeck, a copy of which was kindly sent to him from Sir Herbert Ingram, B.T., England.\n The Hsiu Wu kiln site was discovered in 1933 by the late R. W. Swallow, and was inspected in the following year by Mr. Karlbeck. The site is located at the Potter\u0027s Valley about four miles north of Chiao Tso in the northern part of Honanshêng Province.\n It is worth a discussion by what name this kiln site should be called. Mr. Karlbeck called it Chiao Tso after the name of a town near it. The Chinese people call it T\u0027ang Yang Yü, the name of the hamlet where the kiln actually existed. The writer suggests to call it Hsiu Wu by the name of the prefecture, since it can be easily identified while Chiao Tso or T\u0027ang Yang Yü are too small to be found in any of Chinese gazetteers or maps. We have already similar examples, such as the Ting Yao, Ju Yao, Tzu Chou Yao and Lung Chüan Yao named after respective prefectures, though the actual locations of them may be miles or even tens of miles away from those places.\n Resultant from the discovery of the Hsiu Wu Yao, we ought to amend our notion of the Tzu Chou Yao, for most of the best ones among the pieces hitherto believed to be Tzu Chou Yao ware have been found to be Hsiu Wu Yao ware. There were picked up at the Hsiu Wu Yao site quite a number of rare ceramic fragments, which are roughly classified into four groups, as follows: (1) pottery resembling Tzu Chou Yao ware; (2) porcelain resembling Ting Yao ware; (3) pottery resembling Chün Yao ware; and (4) others.\n (1) Among pottery pieces hitherto ascribed to be Tzu Chou Yao ware, there are various sorts besides the ones like the specimen given in color reproduction at the head of this volume : (a) marbled ware; (b) ware having free and artistic designs painted in black or brown on white slip (c) ware decorated with graffito ornament; (d) ware coated with green glaze at low temperature on the body of Tzu Chou Yao style pottery; and (e) three-color glaze ware of the Sung Dynasty, all of which are presumed to be Hsiu Wu Yao ware.\n (2) Of the Ting Yao style porcelain, there are: (a) white porcelain; (b) black porcelain; and (c) white porcelain having elaborate decorations in black or brown.\n (3) Of the Chün Yao style pottery, too, there are various sorts, including, in particular, such famous ware as bulb bowls and flower-pots which have been valued very highly since old. Mr. Karlbeck reports of his discovering “glaze samples with incised numerals and with Chün-like glaze.”\n (4) Besides the three groups discussed above the Hsiu Wu Yao produced various sorts of ceramics. The writer presumes that the red-enamel ware of the Sung Dynasty, famed as the oldest of enamel-color pottery in the East, are products from the Hsiu Wu Yao, too.\n The Hsiu Wu Yao is the most impressive and most attractive kiln, not only in the Northern Sung Dynasty but througout the long history of twenty centuries of Chinese ceramics. The reason why such excellent ware was produced at the Hsiu Wu Yao, is presumably attributable to the location of the kiln near K\u0027ai-fêng, the capital city of the Northern Sung Dynasty. In other words, the prosperity of the Hsiu Wu Yao, and the style of its products, were closely related to the prosperity of K\u0027ai-fêng. It is not known when the Hsiu Wu Yao was founded and when abandoned, but it is most likely that it was active from the middle of the Northern Sung Dynasty to the Yüan Dynasty, and that it flourished most around the Chêng-ho and Hsüan-ho Eras (1111-1125A.D.) towards the end of the Northern Sung Dynasty.", "subitem_description_type": "Abstract"}]}, "item_creator": {"attribute_name": "著者", "attribute_type": "creator", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"creatorNames": [{"creatorName": "小山, 冨士夫"}], "nameIdentifiers": [{"nameIdentifier": "28186", "nameIdentifierScheme": "WEKO"}]}, {"creatorNames": [{"creatorName": "Koyama, Fujio", "creatorNameLang": "en"}], "nameIdentifiers": [{"nameIdentifier": "28187", "nameIdentifierScheme": "WEKO"}]}]}, "item_files": {"attribute_name": "ファイル情報", "attribute_type": "file", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"accessrole": "open_date", "date": [{"dateType": "Available", "dateValue": "2016-12-27"}], "displaytype": "detail", "download_preview_message": "", "file_order": 0, "filename": "161_1_Oyama_Redacted.pdf", "filesize": [{"value": "28.4 MB"}], "format": "application/pdf", "future_date_message": "", "is_thumbnail": false, "licensetype": "license_11", "mimetype": "application/pdf", "size": 28400000.0, "url": {"label": "161_1_Oyama_Redacted.pdf", "url": "https://tobunken.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/6977/files/161_1_Oyama_Redacted.pdf"}, "version_id": "b8c63f32-7294-4e09-8f9a-c95c242ea75f"}]}, "item_keyword": {"attribute_name": "キーワード", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"subitem_subject": "北宋修武窯緑釉彫花文大花瓶・北宋修武窯白地黒掻落手蓮花文瓶(米国 フリヤー美術館蔵)・修武窯白磁小壷(東京 荻田朝雄氏蔵)・修武窯黒地飛白文小壷(米国 マイヤー氏蔵)・修武窯白磁黒地唐草文瓶(米国 クリーブランド美術館蔵)・修武窯白磁牡丹唐草象嵌文托(米国 マイヤー氏蔵)・修武窯白掻落黒象嵌牡丹唐草文瓶(米国 フォッグ美術館蔵)・修武窯白掻落牡丹唐草文瓶(米国 ハウゲ氏蔵)・修武窯白地黒掻落牡丹文瓶(東京 細川護立氏蔵)・修武窯白地黒掻落牡丹唐草文瓶(恩賜京都博物館蔵)・修武窯と推定される断片(定窯風の白磁と均窯風の断片・練上手及び低火度色釉片・白掻落手・白地黒掻落手)", "subitem_subject_scheme": "Other"}, {"subitem_subject": "Hsiu Wu Ceramic Kilns in the Northern Sung Dynasty, China", "subitem_subject_language": "en", "subitem_subject_scheme": "Other"}]}, "item_language": {"attribute_name": "言語", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"subitem_language": "jpn"}]}, "item_resource_type": {"attribute_name": "資源タイプ", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"resourcetype": "journal article", "resourceuri": "http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501"}]}, "item_title": "北宋の修武窯", "item_titles": {"attribute_name": "タイトル", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"subitem_title": "北宋の修武窯"}, {"subitem_title": "Hsiu Wu Ceramic Kilns in the Northern Sung Dynasty, China", "subitem_title_language": "en"}]}, "item_type_id": "10001", "owner": "3", "path": ["1201"], "permalink_uri": "https://tobunken.repo.nii.ac.jp/records/6977", "pubdate": {"attribute_name": "公開日", "attribute_value": "2016-12-27"}, "publish_date": "2016-12-27", "publish_status": "0", "recid": "6977", "relation": {}, "relation_version_is_last": true, "title": ["北宋の修武窯"], "weko_shared_id": -1}
北宋の修武窯
https://tobunken.repo.nii.ac.jp/records/6977
https://tobunken.repo.nii.ac.jp/records/69778eb4433d-e49e-473a-9d7d-97acf36f06c2
名前 / ファイル | ライセンス | アクション |
---|---|---|
161_1_Oyama_Redacted.pdf (28.4 MB)
|
Item type | 学術雑誌論文 / Journal Article(1) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
公開日 | 2016-12-27 | |||||
タイトル | ||||||
タイトル | 北宋の修武窯 | |||||
タイトル | ||||||
言語 | en | |||||
タイトル | Hsiu Wu Ceramic Kilns in the Northern Sung Dynasty, China | |||||
言語 | ||||||
言語 | jpn | |||||
キーワード | ||||||
主題Scheme | Other | |||||
主題 | 北宋修武窯緑釉彫花文大花瓶・北宋修武窯白地黒掻落手蓮花文瓶(米国 フリヤー美術館蔵)・修武窯白磁小壷(東京 荻田朝雄氏蔵)・修武窯黒地飛白文小壷(米国 マイヤー氏蔵)・修武窯白磁黒地唐草文瓶(米国 クリーブランド美術館蔵)・修武窯白磁牡丹唐草象嵌文托(米国 マイヤー氏蔵)・修武窯白掻落黒象嵌牡丹唐草文瓶(米国 フォッグ美術館蔵)・修武窯白掻落牡丹唐草文瓶(米国 ハウゲ氏蔵)・修武窯白地黒掻落牡丹文瓶(東京 細川護立氏蔵)・修武窯白地黒掻落牡丹唐草文瓶(恩賜京都博物館蔵)・修武窯と推定される断片(定窯風の白磁と均窯風の断片・練上手及び低火度色釉片・白掻落手・白地黒掻落手) | |||||
キーワード | ||||||
言語 | en | |||||
主題Scheme | Other | |||||
主題 | Hsiu Wu Ceramic Kilns in the Northern Sung Dynasty, China | |||||
資源タイプ | ||||||
資源タイプ識別子 | http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 | |||||
資源タイプ | journal article | |||||
著者 |
小山, 冨士夫
× 小山, 冨士夫× Koyama, Fujio |
|||||
抄録 | ||||||
内容記述タイプ | Abstract | |||||
内容記述 | It is strange that the Hsiu Wu Yao, or Chiao Tso Yao, the most important. and particularly fine in the quality of products among the Chinese ceramic kilns. in the Northern Sung Dynasty, has not hitherto been known of its existence. The discovery of the Hsiu Wu Yao brought various problems, hitherto left unsettled, about important Northern Sung ceramic products, and proved a very significant center of the sort in the period, even more significant than the Ting Yao or Ju Yao. The writer learned the existence of this kiln site during his trip to Northern China in 1943, and has kept an eye on products from it ever since. A detailed information about it reached him through the Notes on the Wares from the Chiao Tso Potteries (Ethnos, No. 3, 1943) by Orvar Karlbeck, a copy of which was kindly sent to him from Sir Herbert Ingram, B.T., England. The Hsiu Wu kiln site was discovered in 1933 by the late R. W. Swallow, and was inspected in the following year by Mr. Karlbeck. The site is located at the Potter's Valley about four miles north of Chiao Tso in the northern part of Honanshêng Province. It is worth a discussion by what name this kiln site should be called. Mr. Karlbeck called it Chiao Tso after the name of a town near it. The Chinese people call it T'ang Yang Yü, the name of the hamlet where the kiln actually existed. The writer suggests to call it Hsiu Wu by the name of the prefecture, since it can be easily identified while Chiao Tso or T'ang Yang Yü are too small to be found in any of Chinese gazetteers or maps. We have already similar examples, such as the Ting Yao, Ju Yao, Tzu Chou Yao and Lung Chüan Yao named after respective prefectures, though the actual locations of them may be miles or even tens of miles away from those places. Resultant from the discovery of the Hsiu Wu Yao, we ought to amend our notion of the Tzu Chou Yao, for most of the best ones among the pieces hitherto believed to be Tzu Chou Yao ware have been found to be Hsiu Wu Yao ware. There were picked up at the Hsiu Wu Yao site quite a number of rare ceramic fragments, which are roughly classified into four groups, as follows: (1) pottery resembling Tzu Chou Yao ware; (2) porcelain resembling Ting Yao ware; (3) pottery resembling Chün Yao ware; and (4) others. (1) Among pottery pieces hitherto ascribed to be Tzu Chou Yao ware, there are various sorts besides the ones like the specimen given in color reproduction at the head of this volume : (a) marbled ware; (b) ware having free and artistic designs painted in black or brown on white slip (c) ware decorated with graffito ornament; (d) ware coated with green glaze at low temperature on the body of Tzu Chou Yao style pottery; and (e) three-color glaze ware of the Sung Dynasty, all of which are presumed to be Hsiu Wu Yao ware. (2) Of the Ting Yao style porcelain, there are: (a) white porcelain; (b) black porcelain; and (c) white porcelain having elaborate decorations in black or brown. (3) Of the Chün Yao style pottery, too, there are various sorts, including, in particular, such famous ware as bulb bowls and flower-pots which have been valued very highly since old. Mr. Karlbeck reports of his discovering “glaze samples with incised numerals and with Chün-like glaze.” (4) Besides the three groups discussed above the Hsiu Wu Yao produced various sorts of ceramics. The writer presumes that the red-enamel ware of the Sung Dynasty, famed as the oldest of enamel-color pottery in the East, are products from the Hsiu Wu Yao, too. The Hsiu Wu Yao is the most impressive and most attractive kiln, not only in the Northern Sung Dynasty but througout the long history of twenty centuries of Chinese ceramics. The reason why such excellent ware was produced at the Hsiu Wu Yao, is presumably attributable to the location of the kiln near K'ai-fêng, the capital city of the Northern Sung Dynasty. In other words, the prosperity of the Hsiu Wu Yao, and the style of its products, were closely related to the prosperity of K'ai-fêng. It is not known when the Hsiu Wu Yao was founded and when abandoned, but it is most likely that it was active from the middle of the Northern Sung Dynasty to the Yüan Dynasty, and that it flourished most around the Chêng-ho and Hsüan-ho Eras (1111-1125A.D.) towards the end of the Northern Sung Dynasty. |
|||||
書誌情報 |
美術研究 en : The bijutsu kenkyu : the journal of art studies 号 161, p. 1-19, 発行日 1951-03-30 |