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Asian Art Museum's Li He describes some of the vases created during the Ming Dynasty.
A groundbreaking exhibition, Power and Glory was the first exhibition to focus on the full range of Ming dynasty (1368-1644) court arts. More than 200 treasures were on view, including gold and jade, paintings and porcelains, from China’s greatest museums, many never before seen outside of China. The works illustrated how this ancient dynasty surpassed the technology of its time to become a global leader in maritime power, mass production and artistic accomplishment.
Organized by the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, the Palace Museum, the Nanjing Municipal Museum and the Shanghai Museum.
The emperors Yongle and Xuande were remembered as very good patronage of art and good connoisseur of porcelain.
So, under their patronage, the imperial shop in Jingdezhen in South East produced many, many new types of productions;
one of them is this blue and white vase called the Meiping. Meiping, literally, meaning a plum vase.
During the Ming period, the Meiping was very popular because the emperor Xuande loved this shape and loved the blue and white.
The decorations difference is the only use of cobalt, which is imported from Islamic world, to paint the design before glazing and then glazed and fired.
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