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Oriental Museum Ceramic Study Centre 

In response to national and international recognition of the importance of the Oriental Museum’s Asian ceramic collections and associated scholarship (both within the Museum and the University’s Academic Departments), the Oriental Museum's Ceramic Study Centre was established in May 2024 as a focus for teaching, research and inter-institutional collaboration in this field.

Durham University is recognised as a major centre for the study of the international trade in Chinese ceramics in the medieval period.  Ceramics also sit at the heart of a range of research-led Memoranda of Understanding include the Palace Museum, Beijing; the National Museum of Japanese History; the National University of Singapore and the University of Malaya.  In addition, in 2024 the National Museum of Korea generously agreed to fund a 2-year curatorial post to focus upon the Oriental Museum’s Korean collections.  This role has a heavy focus upon researching and reinterpreting our Korean ceramic collection. 

In addition to promoting broader scholarship in the field of Asian ceramics, the Ceramic Study Centre seeks to enhance awareness of the Oriental Museum’s outstanding Asian ceramic collections and encourage both national and international partnership work focused upon them through promoting co-curated exhibitions (both digital and physical); online resource development; joint publications; research collaborations; and through the support of the Durham Collection Fellowship Programme.

Ceramics at the Oriental Museum

World-class ceramic collections have sat at the heart of the Oriental Museum’s collections since its creation, with the Chinese ceramic collection of Rt Hon Malcolm MacDonald being one of the Museum’s founding collections.  Over the past 60 years curators have worked with collectors to bring a wide range of major collections of ceramics from across Asia into the museum. This has been supplemented by targeted acquisitions, including contemporary material. The collection today includes some more than 5,000 ceramic items, primarily from West & Central Asia, South-East Asia, Japan, China and Korea.

The collection ranges in date from prehistory to the present day, with a significant focus having been placed in recent years upon the collection of contemporary work by prominent and developing potters.  Planned future bequests will further enhance the Japanese, Chinese and West Asian collections, as well as developing our holdings of European pottery reflecting the influence of Asian ceramics on the West.

Key ceramic collections at the Oriental Museum

Find out more about the range of ceramic collections at the Oriental Museum and current projects with a ceramic focus. 

David and Anne Hyatt King Collection of Japanese ceramics

Gifted to the Oriental Museum in 2016, this collection of more than 2,500 pieces is the focus of ongoing research and planning for an exhibition and book in 2026.
Japanese porcelain jug in orange net protective cover together with presentation box and lid

Roderick Wright cross-cultural ceramic collection

A significant collection combining significant 17th and 18th century Japanese porcelain with Chinese export wares, Islamic pieces and European comparators and copies.
An oval shaped porcelain vessel with a long neck and blue decoration painted on the front

Malcolm MacDonald Collection of Chinese ceramics

One of the founding collections of the Oriental Museum. This is the most extensively studied group of ceramics within the Oriental Museum.
Song dynasty ding ware bowl with ducks

Mrs Sheila M Hoey Middleton Collection of Korean ceramic sherds

The majority of pieces in this collection are from the excavation of the British Embassy in Seoul.
a pottery sherd with labels stuck to it viewed through a magnifying glass

Jarmila Stemson Collection of Southeast Asian ceramics

Mrs Stemson's aim was to create a reference collection containing examples from across the region to highlight the connections and variety of forms.
A brown jug with a rounded body and spout