Earthenware with red and white slip and black pigment
Dimensions:
H x W x D (overall): 16 x 17.5 x 14 cm (6 5/16 x 6 7/8 x 5 1/2 in)
Style:
Sawankhalok ware
Type:
Vessel
Origin:
Sawankhalok kilns, Si Satchanalai, Sukhothai province, North-central Thailand
Date:
16th century
Period:
Ayutthaya period
Provenance:
From 1971 to 2005
Sarah M. and Konrad Bekker, purchased in Ayutthaya in 1971 [1]
From 2005
Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, given by Sarah M. Bekker, Arlington, VA, in 2005
Notes:
[1] The donor, Dr. Sarah Bekker, is a respected scholar of Southeast Asian art. With her husband, Konrad Bekker, an Economics Officer with the U.S. Department of State, she lived in India, Burma, and Thailand, where the Bekkers pursued a shared deep interest in the arts. The objects in their gift were acquired in Thailand between 1964 and 1971; this object was purchased in Ayutthaya in 1971. In 1964 Dr. Bekker received her Ph.D. in Social Psychology from George Washington University, on a topic relating to Burmese concepts of duty, obligation, and "face." She has lectured and written widely, especially on Burma, and for several years she led study tours to Mainland Southeast Asia for the Smithsonian Associates. The Bekkers' collection of Burmese art forms the core of the Burmese art collection at the Center for Burma Studies, Northern Illinois University, and other gifts reside in the art museum at Denison University and the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco. Lender's number: 09/42 (this number indicates object no. 1942 in the inventory prepared by the Bekkers before their return from Bangkok to the U.S. in 1971). See Louise A. Cort, Acquisition Consideration form justification, April 21, 2005.
Collection:
National Museum of Asian Art Collection
Exhibition History:
Taking Shape: Ceramics in Southeast Asia (April 1, 2007 to December 4, 2011)