Celadon Double-Walled Openwork Vase: Plum Blossom and Crane Motif
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This work is chosen by those who understand that one of the great achievements of ceramic art lies in its ability to create depth not only in form, but in perception.
“It invites the eye to pass through the surface, only to discover that the true image lies within.”
Created by ceramic artist Cho Byung-gwan, this celadon vase is a refined interpretation of the Korean double-walled openwork tradition, a form of making that is as technically demanding as it is visually rewarding. The piece is distinguished not only by the precision of its pierced outer body, but by the carefully conceived relationship between outer shell and inner vessel. Rather than offering a single readable surface, it unfolds through layers—physical, visual, and symbolic.
The first layer is structural. In this technique, the inner vessel must be made and resolved before the outer vessel can be formed around it. Only after that second body is added can the outer wall be pierced. This sequence introduces considerable risk. Once opened, the outer shell loses some of its structural security, and any imbalance in moisture, thickness, drying tension, or firing behaviour may result in failure. The work therefore depends on an exacting level of calculation and restraint. Its calm appearance conceals a process shaped by fragility and risk.
Yet the technical feat alone does not define the work. What makes it especially memorable is the role of the inner vessel. In many layered ceramic forms, the interior exists mainly as support. Here, however, it becomes the site of imagery and meaning. Cho Byung-gwan coats the inner body with white slip and then carves into that surface to create plum blossom and crane motifs. These are not presented openly. Instead, they are encountered through the apertures of the outer wall, fragment by fragment, so that the viewer never receives the scene all at once.
This mode of revelation is central to the piece’s poetic force. The pierced outer wall acts almost like a screen, lattice, or veil. Through its rounded openings, the imagery within appears in glimpses—red-accented plum blossoms, branches, and cranes suspended in a pale celadon interior. The effect is neither fully pictorial nor fully abstract. It creates the sensation of looking into a hidden domain, as though a second world were enclosed within the first. The vase thus becomes an object of layered seeing, where perception is slowed and deepened.
The symbolism of the motifs reinforces this reading. Plum blossom has long signified endurance, renewal, and purity, valued for blooming in adversity and announcing the turn toward spring. The crane, in East Asian visual culture, carries associations of longevity, nobility, and transcendence. Combined within the protected inner chamber of the vessel, these motifs suggest an interior realm of cultivated virtue and auspicious life. Their partial visibility through the openwork shell gives them an almost visionary quality.
Equally significant is the formal contrast between the two layers. The outer vessel is governed by rhythm and repetition: a measured field of rounded openings distributed across the surface. The inner vessel, by contrast, holds figural and organic imagery. One layer is architectural, the other pictorial. One filters vision, the other rewards it. This contrast gives the work its unusual balance between order and lyricism.
The lotus motif at the base completes the composition. More than an ornamental border, it serves as a symbolic and visual grounding element. Traditionally associated with purity, awakening, and spiritual refinement, the lotus stabilises a work otherwise defined by permeability and visual passage. It anchors the vessel in a language of serenity while echoing the deeper themes of inner clarity and revealed beauty.
What ultimately makes this vase compelling is the intelligence of its transformation. A highly difficult ceramic method is not used here for display alone, but in service of a perceptual idea: that beauty may be approached through concealment, and that what is hidden may carry greater resonance than what is immediately seen. In this sense, the work is both technically accomplished and conceptually refined. It stands as a celadon vessel, a sculptural screen, and a contained poetic landscape all at once.
Dimensions
- Diameter- 13cm (5.12 inch)
- Height- 14.5cm (5.71 inch)
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