Silla Earthenware Long-Necked Jar: Horse Motif with Ring Ornaments
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This work is chosen by those who understand that the most enduring forms often say the most through reduction.
“Here, the horse does not race; it passes in silence around the curve of the jar.”
This long-necked Silla earthenware jar is compelling because it joins architectural clarity with a remarkably light touch of image. Its structure is almost classical in its discipline: a full rounded body, a sharply gathered shoulder, a tall neck, and a raised foot with square piercings that give the lower edge both lift and air. Such a form might easily have remained wholly austere. Instead, it is given a narrow band of incised horses and a set of suspended ring ornaments near the neck. These additions do not interrupt the vessel’s discipline. They reveal it.
The incised horse motif is especially telling. The animals are rendered with extreme economy, reduced to a few engraved lines that define head, back, leg, and tail without insisting on detail. This matters greatly. The horse is one of the most charged animal images in the visual world of ancient Korea, particularly in relation to Silla culture, where it could suggest movement, status, ceremonial passage, and a broader world of mobility and power. Yet here the horse is not monumentalised. It is abbreviated. That abbreviation is what gives the motif its sophistication. Rather than being illustrated, the horse is remembered through line. The jar does not become pictorial; it remains sculptural.
That balance between image and volume is the key to the work. The shoulder band provides a zone of visual animation precisely at the point where the vessel begins to turn from neck to body. As light moves across the curved surface, the incised horses appear and recede, never entirely fixed. The viewer does not read them all at once, but in passing. This creates an experience that is almost processional. One turns around the vessel as the horses do. The composition is therefore not frontal, but circumferential. It unfolds through movement around the form.
The suspended ornaments at the neck deepen this reading in another way. They introduce an element of attachment and motion not through image, but through structure. Their chain-like descent and small pendants create vertical interruptions against the otherwise smooth contour, catching shadow and adding a restrained ceremonial note. They also connect the jar to a broader language of Silla earthenware in which hanging detail could enliven a profile without crowding it. Here, they serve as a subtle counterpoint to the incised horses below: one motif is drawn into the body, the other hangs away from it.
Materially, the jar gains much of its authority from its dark fired surface. Kim Heon-gyu’s Silla and Gaya earthenware is fired at high temperature in a pine-fuelled wood kiln, a process that gives the clay its characteristic dark tonality. The finish tends towards matte restraint, though the unpredictability of flame may leave slight tonal or textural shifts across the surface. This is crucial to the experience of the work. The jar does not rely on glaze, colour, or overt polish. Its power lies in contour, incision, and the slow emergence of detail through light.
Kim Heon-gyu’s achievement here is not simply that he reproduces an early Silla type. It is that he recognises what makes such a form culturally alive: the restraint of the profile, the symbolic charge of a minimally rendered horse, the relation between austere body and moving ornament, and the sense that utility and presence remain joined. He studies older forms closely, but what returns through his hand is not archaeological stiffness. It is ceramic intelligence made active again.
What finally distinguishes this jar is the discipline with which it holds animation in reserve. The horses move, but only through incision. The ornaments hang, but only slightly away from the body. The vessel stands still, yet everything about it suggests passage. In that tension lies its quiet force: a Silla form that carries movement, rank, and memory without ever surrendering its composure.
Dimensions
- Diameter- 18cm (7.08 inch)
- Height- 24cm (9.45 inch)
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