Gaya Earthenware Horse-Head Horn Cup Pair: Large and Small Forms
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This pair is chosen by those who understand that the most compelling ancient forms are often the ones in which image and use remain inseparable.
“The horse does not merely adorn the vessel; it seems to draw it forward, as though the act of drinking once belonged to motion, rite, and belief.”
Created by Kim Heon-gyu, this pair reinterprets the Gaya horse-head horn cup through two related scales, allowing the form to be read both as a historical type and as a living ceramic structure. It was made in this way because the original vessel was never simply a cup with an animal attached to it. The horse head alters the entire meaning of the form. It turns the horn cup into something directional, ceremonial, and charged with presence. One does not look only at a container. One encounters a vessel that already carries movement at its edge.
That is why the composition matters so much. The conical body narrows downward into a short foot, giving the vessel lift and concentration rather than broad stability. This upward-thrusting silhouette is essential to the character of the gakbae. It holds liquid, certainly, but it also stages it. The horse head at the terminal end sharpens that effect further. With its modeled mouth, eyes, and ears, the animal does not remain a decorative appendage. It becomes the vessel’s point of animation, the place where use is transformed into image. The cup appears to extend into the animal, and the animal in turn gives the cup symbolic direction.
In the context of Gaya culture, this is especially resonant. The horse was not a neutral creature, but one bound to status, mobility, martial life, and ritual imagination. To place the horse at the end of the cup was therefore not an arbitrary embellishment. It was made this way because the vessel was intended to carry more than drink. It carried an atmosphere of ceremony and an image of force held in restraint. Even in reduced scale, that logic remains intact. The horse head gives the form dignity, but also something more unusual: a sense that the vessel is already participating in an act larger than itself.
Kim Heon-gyu’s method is central to how convincingly this older form returns. These pieces do not preserve only the outward silhouette of ancient Gaya pottery. They also seek to recover its material gravity. Fired in a wood kiln with pine, at around 1300°C over several days, the clay achieves the dense, hard-fired body and dark, unglazed surface associated with the recreated language of early Silla and Gaya earthenware. This matters deeply. Without that density and dryness, the works might remain historical references alone. With it, they regain something of the severe tactile authority that belongs to ancient high-fired Korean clay.
The surface therefore plays a quieter but equally important role. It absorbs light rather than casting it back, which allows the form to be read through edge, contour, and shadow. The horse head emerges slowly, as do the knife-finished lower sections of the conical body. These trimming marks are especially telling. They preserve evidence of handwork and keep the object close to process. The vessels do not pretend to industrial perfection. They remain visibly shaped, cut, fired, and hardened through labour. In that sense, their elegance is not polished smoothness, but disciplined resolution.
The relationship between the large and small forms is also more than practical variation. Together they clarify the type. The larger cup holds greater ceremonial weight; the smaller gathers the same structure into a more concentrated and intimate scale. Read as a pair, they allow the form to be understood through proportion. One expands the historical imagination of the object, the other condenses it. Their coexistence makes clear that the type is not dependent on a single size for its authority. What matters is the union of conical body, short foot, and horse-head terminal — a formal logic that remains persuasive in either scale.
This also explains why the pair can still be experienced meaningfully in use. To drink from earthenware is already to encounter material differently: the hand registers dryness, weight, firmness, and temperature in a way that glazed surfaces often soften. In these vessels, that sensory closeness is intensified by form. One becomes aware not only of the cup as utensil, but of the animal presence that completes it. The act is therefore subtly altered. Drinking becomes less casual, more attentive. The object asks to be handled with awareness of its lineage.
What finally distinguishes this pair is the completeness of its transformation. Archaeological memory, sculptural image, and vessel function are not separated into categories. They remain joined. The horse is not an ornament placed on a cup; the cup is not merely a support for an animal image. Each explains the other. Through that union, the pair preserves something fundamental in ancient Gaya ceramic thought: that utility could be ceremonial, and that even a drinking vessel could hold rank, motion, and imagination in fired clay.
Dimensions:
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Large
Length- 11cm (4.33 inch)
Height- 11cm (4.33 inch)
Depth- 7.5cm (2.95 inch)
Volume- 100ml -
Small
Length- 7cm (7.87 inch)
Height- 8cm (6.3 inch)
Depth- 6cm (7.87 inch)
Volume- 50ml
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