Gaya Earthenware: Horse-and-Rider Vessel with Twin Horn Cup
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This work is chosen by those who understand that form becomes most revealing when it is asked to carry more than one order of meaning at once.
“A warrior rides forward, yet the true drama lies in the upright stillness behind him.”
This horse-and-rider vessel belongs to one of the most compelling formal languages in ancient Korean pottery, where representation and use are not separate categories but mutually sustaining ones. At its centre is a mounted warrior, but the work does not unfold as a figurine placed upon a vessel. Rather, horse, rider, cups, platform, and pedestal are conceived as interdependent parts of a single structure. It was made in this way because the object was required to do several things at once: to embody martial presence, to function as a container, and to stand as an object of ceremony.
The composition begins at the pedestal. Its flaring form recalls the elevated vessels associated with Gaya pottery, and the pierced apertures reduce visual weight while preserving stability. This is not merely a support. It establishes the principle of elevation. Above it sits a rectangular plate-like body, unusually flat and architectural, which turns the horse into something more than an animal body alone. The work is therefore built in registers: base, platform, animal, rider, vessel. This upward progression is crucial. It guides the eye from grounded stability towards ceremonial height.
The horse is treated with particular intelligence. Rather than being modelled as a fully natural creature, it has been compressed into a more structural form, its flanks becoming planar and armour-like, its body reading almost as a protected chamber. The incised grid of the body, the disciplined fall of the mane, and the exacting tack give it an armoured and almost architectural character. This is entirely appropriate. In Gaya culture, the horse was inseparable from mobility, rank, and military authority. Here that relation is condensed into a form that is both animal and bearer, both presence and support.
The rider is equally telling. He does not dominate through scale, but through equipment and placement. Helmeted, armed with spear and shield, and seated in stable vertical relation to the horse, he reads not as an incidental staffage figure but as the axis of the composition. The shield is especially meaningful. Its ceramic description preserves the memory of a martial object no longer available to us in the same direct material continuity, which is why works of this kind are so important to the study of Gaya arms and horse gear. The figure was made in this way so that military identity would be legible not through narrative action, but through emblematic clarity.
Yet the object would be incomplete if it ended there. Behind the rider rise the twin horn cups, and it is at this point that the work changes from an image of mounted power into a ceremonial vessel. Their paired, flaring bodies create a second visual rhythm within the object. The horse projects forward; the cups rise upward. One movement implies advance, the other offering. The composition is therefore not linear but tensile. It holds together momentum and stillness, worldly rank and ritual function. Although the cups can contain liquid, they do not primarily declare everyday use. Their position and prominence suggest a more formal, possibly ceremonial role, where containment is inseparable from symbolic charge.
This interaction between rider and cups also alters the emotional reading of the piece. The armed figure suggests readiness, defence, and worldly order. The cups behind him introduce another register: libation, rite, presentation, or offering. The vessel thus becomes a compact expression of a culture in which martial authority was not isolated from ceremonial life. One can sense that the object was made not simply to depict a warrior on horseback, but to give material form to the larger system of values in which mounted power took meaning.
The matte dark surface is essential to this reading. It holds the work together by resisting seduction through surface brilliance. Light catches only gradually along the incised armour, the rims of the cups, the edges of the shield, and the profile of the horse’s head. This means that the object does not disclose itself all at once. It asks for slow looking. One begins with silhouette, then passes to structure, then to detail. This measured revelation is part of its dignity.
Kim Heon-gyu’s contribution lies precisely in recognizing that such a work cannot be revived through outward copying alone. His long commitment to Silla and Gaya earthenware allows him to recover not only the appearance of older forms, but the logic that gave them coherence. He approaches the past through close study and renewed making, so that the result retains both archaeological memory and living tactile force. The work does not feel like a static replica of a museum type. It feels like an ancient ceramic intelligence carried forward into the present.
What finally distinguishes this vessel is the completeness of its internal order. The pedestal lifts, the platform steadies, the horse bears, the rider declares, and the twin cups consecrate. Each part explains the others. In this way, the work offers more than an image from ancient Gaya. It offers an entire structure of meaning — one in which rank, function, and ceremony are joined in fired clay with unusual discipline and force.
Historical Note
This work draws on the well-known Gaya horse-and-rider vessel with twin horn cups, dated to the 5th century and designated National Treasure No. 275. The original is preserved in the collection of the Gyeongju National Museum and is regarded as an important source for the study of Gaya horse trappings, weaponry, and ceremonial earthenware of the Three Kingdoms period.
Dimensions
- Width- 14cm (5.51 inch)
- Height- 19.5cm (6.89 inch)
- Depth- 10cm (3.94 inch)
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