Bowl with Cut Decoration
Sasanian Persia, 5th–7th century A.D.
Hirayama Ikuo Silk Road Museum
This precious piece rivals the Hakururi-no-wan (white lapis
lazuli bowel) of the Shōsō-in Repository. When you look into
it, each cut in the glass glistens and reflects off one
another, creating a dazzling effect distinctive to glass.
Made in the Sasanian Empire, this bowl was brought to Japan
from the distant Silk Road. Fragments of this glass have
been excavated from as far east as Japan.
The bowl was formed out of thick blown glass and cut and
polished after being cooled. Even with today’s machines and
technology, it would take several weeks to cut and polish,
revealing the painstaking efforts of the ancient artisan.
Its universal design, the efforts necessary for its
transportation, and its geometric design, which was well
received in any culture, appear to have made this work an
excellent export.
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