top of page

Studio: Steal the Plane 偷飞机去 Series: “Occupation”

Material: Porcelain, underglaze Qinghua cobalt, lead-free overglaze transfer

Dimensions: Height 42cm, mouth 8.5cm, foot 11cm The Meiping is one of the oldest and most celebrated vessel forms in Chinese ceramic history. Its name, "plum vase," refers to its original use as a container for a single branch of plum blossom, though for centuries it has also served to store wine and spirits. The proportions are unmistakable: a narrow mouth opening onto broad, powerful shoulders that taper to a stable foot. It is a form that communicates authority through silhouette alone.

This Meiping stands forty-two centimetres tall, making it the largest work in the Occupation series. Beneath the green Occupation marks, Qinghua dragons coil through clouds and waves across the full height of the vessel. The dragon motif is rendered in the classical imperial register: five-clawed, muscular, surrounded by auspicious cloud scrolls and turbulent seas. Banded borders of ruyi heads, key fret, and lotus panels structure the composition vertically, following the conventions established by Jingdezhen's imperial kilns.

The green marks fall across this surface in dense, overlapping clusters, vivid and organic against the cobalt blue. Green against blue: both colours drawn from the natural world, but operating by completely different rules. The Qinghua dragons follow centuries of compositional discipline. The green marks follow nothing. The tension between the two is what makes the piece impossible to look away from.

This is not a decorative object pretending to be art. It is an art object that happens to take the form of something ancient and functional. It can hold wine. It can hold a single branch. It can hold a room.

Occupation. Dragon Meiping (Green)

£566.00Price
Quantity
    bottom of page