rock and wave

{{Short description|Motif in Asian ceramics}}

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File:Yuan Porcelain 14 (cropped).jpg vase, with a rock-and-wave zone in middle]]

File:Ming Porcelain, Yongle Reign 03 (cropped).jpg, Yongle Emperor ({{reign|1402|1424}}) era dish]]

File:Iznik dish British Museum G.21 (cropped).jpg dish]]

File:Turchia, iznik, piatto, 1550-1600 ca 02.JPG

The rock and wave design or motif is found painted on the outer borders of some Asian ceramics. It originated in Chinese porcelain of the Yuan dynasty (1271–1368) and was later very often used in Iznik pottery and other Turkish ceramics.Rawson, 141 It represents turbulent waves breaking onto rocks, which are generally depicted as a regular pattern with a considerable degree of stylization, especially in Turkish examples. It is normally in blue and white, even where other parts of the piece use other colours.

The "rocks" are represented by blue spiral lines on a white background, and the waves by irregular shapes in white, sometimes with lines within them.{{Cite web|url=https://islamicart.museumwnf.org/database_item.php?id=object;ISL;de;Mus01;36;it|title=Large plate with floral decoration – Discover Islamic Art – Virtual Museum|website=islamicart.museumwnf.org|access-date=2023-01-22|archive-date=2023-01-22|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230122185135/https://islamicart.museumwnf.org/database_item.php?id=object;ISL;de;Mus01;36;it|url-status=live}}

Turkish versions of the design were produced by {{circa|1500}} if not earlier.[https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/W_1965-0729-1 "Dish"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230122183630/https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/W_1965-0729-1 |date=2023-01-22 }}, British Museum The Turkish designs are sometimes criticized as "poorly understood" versions of the Chinese motif,[https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/451800 "Dish with Peacock Design"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230122183630/https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/451800 |date=2023-01-22 }}, Metropolitan Museum of Art, quoted; Rawson, 141 and in many pieces, the design seems to have lost the sense of the marine subject.

Terms

"Rock and wave" is a brusque Western version of the Chinese name pao-shan hai-shui ({{lang|zh|寶山海水}}), meaning "precious mountains and the sea". A related pattern, without the waves, is called the "rock of ages pattern"; there is also much decoration with just wave patterns. Another term used for the regular spiral motifs in Turkish pieces is "ammonite scrolls".Savage and Newman, 246

In later Turkish ceramics, especially in the 17th century, a version developed where the "rocks" were white spaces across the width of the border, and within them a blue or black scroll resembling a letter "S" on its side. These pieces are described in the West as using the dollar pattern, from the resemblance to the $ sign.Savage and Newman, 98

History

Decoration representing waves had a considerable history in Chinese art in various media, often as a background for dragons and other sea monsters.Krahl and Harrison-Hall, 62, 80 These tended to use groups of parallel lines, rising and falling, and passing into each other. Sometimes the waves had breaking crests, typically left in white.Rawson, 138–141 Eventually, these turned into the "rocks" of the standard border pattern.

Chinese influences on Islamic pottery were already considerable and long-standing before much of the Islamic world was briefly politically united with China in the Mongol Empire. Large quantities of Chinese pottery were sent as diplomatic gifts, and there was also considerable trade. Many Chinese wares were designed for Islamic needs and tastes, in particular the large flattish plates which suited Islamic dining customs, rather than the deeper bowls of different sizes used by the Chinese themselves. The development of blue and white pottery in China, with detailed underglaze painting in cobalt blue pigments from Iran, is generally seen as a result of the cross-fertilization of artisans and techniques from different parts of the empire.Vainker, 136–140, 142, 180–181

Fine Iznik wares closely imitating Chinese blue and white were produced from the 1520s onwards, taking as their models Chinese pieces from several decades earlier. This probably reflected both Ottoman taste and the Chinese pieces available in Turkey, considerably boosted by the loot from Ottoman military campaigns that took Damascus and in 1514 Tabriz.Vainker, 141–142

File:MET DP342705 (cropped).jpg|Chinese wave background on a mid-15th-century Ming vase

File:Freer porcelana china 01 (cropped).jpg|Detail of a 15th-century Ming flask, with spirals

File:Qing Porcelain Plate with Dragons (cropped).jpg|Qing-dynasty dish with dragon on wave background

File:Dish from Iznik, Turkey, Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art accession 48.34.JPG|Iznik dollar pattern, {{circa|1580–1585}}

Notes

{{infobox chinese|t={{linktext|寶山|海水}}|s=宝山海水|p=bǎoshān hǎishuǐ|l=treasure mountain [and] seawater|w=pao3-shan1 hai3-shui3}}

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References

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  • Krahl, Regina and Harrison-Hall, Jessica, Chinese Ceramics: Highlights of the Sir Percival David Collection, 2009, British Museum Press, {{ISBN|9780714124544}}
  • Rawson, Jessica, [https://archive.org/details/chineseornamentl0000raws/mode/2up Chinese Ornament: The Lotus and the Dragon], 1984, British Museum Publications, {{ISBN|0714114316}}
  • Savage, George, and Newman, Harold, An Illustrated Dictionary of Ceramics, 1985, Thames & Hudson, {{ISBN|0500273804}}
  • Vainker, S.J., Chinese Pottery and Porcelain, 1991, British Museum Press, {{ISBN|9780714114705}}

Category:Chinese porcelain

Category:Islamic pottery

Category:Types of pottery decoration