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Directory: Japanese: Tea Articles: Pottery (691) |
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Momoyama Gallery
sold Here we present a tasteful kuro (black) Oribe kutsu chawan from the mid Edo period. It has an interesting shape with fantastic black glaze and two different images on it. This bowl is unmarked, which was typical for tea bowls of this era. We offer this tea bowl with a very good box (kiribako). No cracks or repairs - except inborn kiln cracks...
Momoyama Gallery
$600 Already Sold This is a wonderful tea bowl of Japanese Hagi Ware, which was made about 100 years ago. The seal of the potter is stamped on the bottom. Some natural glaze cracks, which were intentionally created in the time of the firing process, are very nice. This bowl has an authentic wabi sabi taste. Hagi Ware is a type of Japanese pottery most identifiable for its humble forms and use of translucent white glaze...
Momoyama Gallery
sold Late Momoyama period cylinder shaped (Hantsutsu - slightly destorted but not a Kutsugata yet) tea bowl made of light, rough Mino clay. The fastly but expertly thrown body in the style of a Narumi-oribe bowl, which is a variation of green Oribe style. The whole body with the exception of the foot and it surrounding area are covered with a thin ash glaze, a low iron content of the body has coloured the the glazed part light brown; the brim is accented with copper oxide glaze...
Momoyama Gallery
$750 Already sold An absolutely stunning Edo period (1700s) Kuro Oribe Chawan covered in thick, ink-black crackle glaze and some fine cream colored decoration. The slightly irregular kutsu-gata form settles easily into the palm of the hand, with the built up rim resting lightly on the fingers. A high quality box called Shiho-zan is part of the offer. The four sides of the box are surrounded. No chips or repairs...
Momoyama Gallery
ALREADY SOLD This is a wonderful Kanbishi chawan of Living National Treasure Potter Arakawa Toyozo with its original signed wooden box. It is in mint condition with no cracks and no repairs. Size: 5,3 inches x 4,9 inches x 3,0 inches Toyozo Arakawa (1894 - 1985) rediscovered the techniques of manufacturing Shino glazes first perfected during the Momoyama and Edo periods...
Momoyama Gallery
ALREADY SOLD We present a Hagi chawan from the Koraizaemon Saka family, offered with the original wood box, dating from the Meiji Period No cracks and repairs. Size: 7,9 cm in height x 12 cm in diameter. The first Hagi wares, a glazed, high-fired stoneware, originated with the Korean potter Li Kyong. He was brought back to Japan by Lord Mori Terumoto after the invasion of Korea in 1593...
Momoyama Gallery
sold Up for sale is this special example of the beauty of Raku ware, a pottery tradition born more than 400 years ago in the ancient Japanese capital of Kyoto, from the collaboration between great tea master Sen Rikyu (1522-1591) and a potter named Chojiro ( - 1592), the forebear of the great Raku family of potters. This particular chawan (tea bowl) was made by the 12th bearer of the Raku name, Raku Kichizaemon Konyu (1857-1932), whose works are not very diversified but who created seren...
Momoyama Gallery
Sold A tetsu-yu chawan by greatest Kanjiro Kawai with signed box. Mint, no cracks or repairs. Size: 8,6 cm height, 13,1 cm diameter. No ceramic artist of the Showa approached Kanjiro Kawai (1890-1966) for creativity and artisanship. Kanjiro was a true artist by nature, and together with Hamada Shoji, set a pattern of study for modern potters...
Momoyama Gallery
$995 sold This is an Edo period chawan by Japans greatest Poet Rengetsu Ōtagaki ( 1791 - 1875 ). It shows a poem of herself, tastefully carved onto the tea bowl. The chawan has a wild and rough look and an aesthetic kintsugi ( gold repair ). A tasteful woodbox is also included. Size: 2.4'' height, 4.3'' width. Ōtagaki Rengetsu was a Buddhist nun who is widely regarded to have been one of the greatest Japanese poets of the 19th century...
Momoyama Gallery
sold This is a rare Wan type chawan, around 400 years old in shape close to a tenmoku tea bowl. It is thrown on a wheel from coarse, unrefined iron bearing clay. The grey ash glaze has been painted on the body with a straw brush as seen on Korean hakeme chawan. A stone in the wall has exploded in the fire - a very sought after effect ( see pic number 2 ), giving this type of Karatsu bowls its name: ishihaze (exploding stone)...
Momoyama Gallery
$800 Sold A superb Karatsu chawan dating from the mid Edo period (1615-1868). Karatsu pottery originated more than four hundred years ago in the small town of Karatsu, located in northern Kyushu. It has been a favorite of tea practitioners for centuries for its simple design and natural feel...
Momoyama Gallery
$350 Sold On offer is this unique and wonderful hand painted Japanese tea bowl from the end of the 19th. century ( Meiji Period ). The colours of this antique tea bowl are amazing. There are no chips, no cracks and no repairs, best condition. There is a sign of the artist, but i was unable to identify him. You will not find a similar tea bowl. This style is definitely rare. Size: 8,2 cm height x 11 cm diameter. Shipping included
Momoyama Gallery
$350.00 Antique tasteful Satsuma Chawan made and marked by Gyozan, one of the most famous Japanese Satsuma artists, circa 1905, during the Meiji Period. It presents a wonderful hand painting on it with strong and shiny colours. The typical Satsuma ware we most come into contact with is a yellowish earthenware usually decorated with a minute decoration with Japanese figures, expressive faces or detailed oriental landscapes, or sometimes embellished with vivid dragons in relief...
Momoyama Gallery
$1200 SOLD ALREADY Here we are proud to present another perfect early 17th. century chawan in museum quality. Low cylinder shaped (hanzutsu) tea bowl made of light, fine but unrefined Mino clay with sone iron oxide content. The expertly thrown body is covered -with the exception of the bottom and the roughly cut foot ring - with the typical feldspatic Shino over an iron oxide based engobe...
Momoyama Gallery
$450 Sold This is a collectable Japanese Seto ware mountain tea bowl, excavated and repaired with a gold repair, an aesthetic kintsugi. The Yamajawan or Yama-Chawan, which means translatet 'Mountain tea bowl', has an ore-like sparkle natural ash glaze. It is for sure a proto-pottery bowl with great reference value. Seto ware is pottery with the oldest history in Japan...
Momoyama Gallery
sold This interesting piece is a ko-karatsu ware ( old Karatsu ). This appellation designates early pottery from the kilns of the town of Karatsu, located on the island of Kyushu, Japan. The date of the foundation of the first karatsu kilns is uncertain, but there seems a consensus for it to be around the beginning of the 16th century during the late Muromachi period ( 1336-1573 ). The first potters were from Korea, and they brought to Japan techniques which contributed to the creation of unique w...
Momoyama Gallery
Sold We offer a really rare kiseto ( yellow seto ware ) chawan from the Momoyama Period with tanpan marks ( copper green marks ). It is a high fired ware from the end of the 16th. century in the Aburage-Hada style. The early Kiseto glazes ( yellow Seto ) from the Muromachi period are considered to be attempts to emulate Chinese celadons from the Song dynasty. The composition of the wood ash feldspar glazes largely resembled that of the celadons; however, in oxidation instead of...
Momoyama Gallery
$1400 Sold Our Kutsu / gutsu gata ( shoe shaped ) tea bowl is made of iron bearing Karatsu clay. Its fastly but expertly thrown body is glazed inside and outside, with the exception of the bottom including the roughly cut foot ring with an ash glaze which has some Feldspat mixed in glaze. The decoration under the glaze is painted in dark brown iron bearing clay directly on the body - flying birds. To prevent the glaze from flaking off at the rim, iron oxide was painted under the gl... |