Wine bottle with Ten Symbols of Longevity design

Accession Number
2004/1.281

Title
Wine bottle with Ten Symbols of Longevity design

Artist(s)
Korean

Artist Nationality
Korean (culture or style)

Object Creation Date
19th century

Medium & Support
porcelain with cobalt pigment under colorless glaze

Dimensions
12 3/16 x 8 1/4 x 8 1/4 in. (30.8 x 20.8 x 20.8 cm)

Credit Line
Gift of Bruce and Inta Hasenkamp and Museum purchase made possible by Elder and Mrs. Sang-Yong Nam

Label copy
March 28, 2009
After a hiatus due to invasions from Japan and war with Manchu-led China, production of Korean blue-and-white wares began again at the government kilns at Bunweon in 1752. Pear-shaped bottles such as this were made in great numbers in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The Chinese decoration appealed to the Neo-Confucian elite. The ten Daoist symbols of longevity—sun, cloud, mountain, rock, water, crane, deer, turtle, pine tree, and mushroom of eternal youth—are painted in bright cobalt around the bulbous form. Notwithstanding the Chinese-inspired motifs, this vessel’s softly painted decoration on a pure porcelain body under a clear glaze exemplifies the balance between informality and dignity that is characteristic of Korean ceramic art.
(Label for UMMA Korean Gallery Opening Rotation, March 2009)

Subject matter
Wine bottle with ten Daoist symbols of longevity—sun, cloud, mountain, rock, water, crane, deer, turtle, pine tree, and the mushroom of eternal youth.

Physical Description
Porcelain wine bottle with ten cobalt pigment depicting Chinese Daoist ten symbols of longevity—sun, cloud, mountain, rock, water, crane, deer, turtle, pine tree, and the mushroom of eternal youth. A blue band rings the foot of the bottle, as well as just below the main register of the body. The ten symbols of longevity design stretches around the bulbous body above, tapering off as the body begins to taper into the tubular neck, culminating in a slightly flared rim.

This bottle was produced in Bunwon-ri, Gwangju-si, Gyeonggi-do. It is decorated on the entire surface with ten longevity symbols, including deer, pine trees, and cranes, rendered in underglaze cobalt blue. Ten longevity symbols were frequently chosen to decorate the stationery, bottles, and jars produced in the late 19th century at kilns in Bunwon-ri. This is a high-quality white porcelain bottle, with well sintered clay and glaze and outstanding cobalt blue colouring.
[Korean Collection, University of Michigan Museum of Art (2014) p.178]

Primary Object Classification
Ceramic

Primary Object Type
bottle

Collection Area
Asian

Rights
If you are interested in using an image for a publication, please visit http://umma.umich.edu/request-image for more information and to fill out the online Image Rights and Reproductions Request Form. Keywords
bottles
ceramics (object genre)
porcelain (visual works)
symbols

12 Related Resources

Life in Ceramics Timeline Panel Text
(Part of 4 Learning Collections)
Manchu, Qing Dynasty
(Part of 2 Learning Collections)
Daoism / Taoism
(Part of: Religion and Spirituality)
Third Grade: Nature 
(Part of: Docent Curricular Tours)
Essay: Dewing
(Part of: Docent Essays on UMMA Collection Objects)
Cobalt & Blue
(Part of: Exchange and Influence on Global Trade Routes)
Blue and White Ware
(Part of: Tremel Ceramic Production Collection)
Korean Art for Touring
(Part of: Module 8: Amplify BIPOC Voices)
Weese Collection and Gallery Rotations: Docent Module
(Part of: Fall 2021 Docent Exhibition Packet)

& Author Notes

Web Use Permitted

On display

UMMA Gallery Location ➜ FFW, Mezzanine ➜ M07 (Woon-hyung Lee and Korea Foundation Gallery of Korean Art)