The Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History   The Metropolitan Museum of Art
World MapsTimelines / RegionsThematic EssaysWorks of ArtIndex  
Stem cup, Ban Chiang type, 1st millennium B.C.
Thailand
Earthenware with painted and incised decoration; H. 9 1/2 in. (24.1 cm)
Gift of Cynthia Hazen Polsky, 1987 (1987.424.4.2)

This elegant stem cup was assembled in two pieces: a short bulbous cup with a full rim, and a longer handle or "stem" with a splayed foot. Geometric patterns, both curvilinear forms and more structured triangles and rectangles, are delicately incised on the cup and at the lower part of the stem, and painted with red and buff slips.

Cups such as this example, which combine painted and incised decoration, are assigned to the middle phase at Ban Chiang and related sites. Several cups in this shape are known; however, no comparable pieces have been scientifically excavated at the site. They may represent a cognate tradition centered on a comparable site on the Khorat Plateau or elsewhere in mainland Southeast Asia. Such ceramics were most likely among the luxury goods traded and exchanged as gifts between cultures in Southeast Asia that had long been linked to each other via rivers and other waterways.


Open full-size image



  • Related Timeline(s)

    Related Index Terms

    Geography/Place

    Material and Technique

    Technical Glossary


    Stem cup, Ban Chiang type, 1st millennium B.C.
    Thailand
    Earthenware with painted and incised decoration; H. 9 1/2 in. (24.1 cm)
    Gift of Cynthia Hazen Polsky, 1987 (1987.424.4.2)