Celadon Vase (Ho): Yeollimun Mixed-Clay Technique by Master Artisan
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This work belongs to a collector who looks for cultural memory not in ornament alone, but in the discipline by which a material is brought into order.
“The jar appears to breathe through its surface, as if mist, clay, and time had settled into one rounded form.”
Kim Yong Seop’s Korean Celadon Jar: Yeollimun Mixed-Clay Technique presents a contemporary continuation of a rare ceramic language known from the Goryeo period. As an Icheon master ceramist, Kim approaches Yeollimun not as revival for its own sake, but as a demanding structure of thought: the pattern must be born within the clay, yet brought into visible order through deliberate forming, cutting, and firing.
The form is deliberately restrained. A compact foot anchors the vessel, the body expands into a generous spherical volume, and the shoulder closes gently towards a narrow mouth. This controlled profile allows the surface to be read slowly. The jar does not rely on pictorial imagery; instead, its meaning unfolds through rhythm, density, and the movement of clay itself.
Yeollimun is often described through its resemblance to marbling or wood grain, but in this work the comparison is only a beginning. The white, celadon, and dark clays have been mixed so that their colours remain distinct while also entering into a shared flow. This balance is difficult to maintain. If the clay is overworked, the colours lose their independence; if it is not sufficiently worked, air and uneven structure may cause failure in the kiln. The visible pattern therefore records a highly disciplined negotiation between softness and control.
The vertical grooves are central to the object’s intelligence. After wheel-throwing, the surface has been carved at even intervals, creating a ribbed structure that draws the eye from foot to mouth. Yet these grooves are not independent from the Yeollimun movement beneath them. They appear to have been cut in conscious relation to the mixed-clay pattern, allowing the darker and lighter passages to gather, repeat, and intensify across the curvature of the body. The result is neither purely natural nor mechanically regular. It is a composed meeting between accident and judgement.
Around the middle of the jar, the darker pattern forms a horizontal zone, almost like a band of compressed breath. Above it, the vertical lines feel lighter and more open; below it, the pattern thickens and becomes more mineral, more inward. This arrangement gives the jar a sense of gravity. The eye is held at the centre before being released upward towards the mouth or downward towards the foot. In this way, the vessel guides viewing through its own structure.
Within Korean ceramic history, Yeollimun carries the quiet dignity of a path less widely preserved. Though known in the Goryeo period, it did not achieve the same public familiarity as other celebrated forms of Goryeo celadon because its process was difficult to control and unsuited to easy repetition. Kim Yong Seop’s work therefore has significance beyond surface beauty. It participates in the continuation of a fragile ceramic memory, one that nearly receded from common recognition.
The blue-green glaze gives the jar a subdued luminosity. It does not cover the Yeollimun pattern so much as hold it in suspension. Reflections pass across the ribs, while the darker clay appears and disappears according to angle and light. The rounded body rewards rotation: each view reveals a slightly different relationship between vertical carving, horizontal banding, and the internal flow of mixed earth.
As a vessel, it is not visually static. Its presence changes with looking. From the front, it appears composed and balanced; from an angle, the ribbed surface begins to move; seen from above, the small mouth becomes a dark centre within the radiating structure of the clay. The work carries the memory of the wheel, the pressure of the hand, the difficulty of firing, and the long patience required to make uncertainty behave without silencing it.
This jar stands as a contemporary vessel of inheritance: quiet, exacting, and deeply Korean in its understanding that beauty may arise when nature is guided, not conquered.
Dimension
- Diameter- 18 cm (7.08 inch)
- Height- 16.5 cm (6.5 inch)
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