Description:

JAPANESE SCALLOPED EARTHENWARE BOWL BY SEIZAN signed under foot, the central roundel decorated with a beauty end enclosed within an alternating brocade border with a ho-o (phoenix) whose trailing tail feathers wind through the panels around the sides

Provenance: Estate of Col. A.W. Bagot, Castine, Maine

Literature: Kilns have produced earthenware, pottery, stoneware, glazed pottery, glazed stoneware, porcelain, and blue-and-white ware. Japan has an exceptionally long and successful history of ceramic production. Earthenwares were created as early as the Jomon period (10,000–300 BCE), giving Japan one of the oldest ceramic traditions in the world. Japan is further distinguished by the unusual esteem that ceramics holds within its artistic tradition, owing to the enduring popularity of the tea ceremony.

Japanese pottery is distinguished by two polarized aesthetic traditions. On the one hand, there is a tradition of very simple and roughly finished pottery, mostly in earthenware and using a muted palette of earth colours. This relates to Zen Buddhism and many of the greatest masters were priests, especially in early periods. Many pieces are also related to the Japanese tea ceremony and embody the aesthetic principles of wabi-sabi ("austerity-rust/patina"). Most raku ware, where the final decoration is partly random, is in this tradition. The other tradition is of highly finished and brightly coloured factory wares, mostly in porcelain, with complex and balanced decoration, which develops Chinese porcelain styles in a distinct way.

A third tradition, of simple but perfectly formed and glazed stonewares, also relates more closely to both Chinese and Korean traditions. In the 16th century, a number of styles of traditional utilitarian rustic wares then in production became admired for their simplicity, and their forms have often been kept in production to the present day for a collectors market.

Kiyomizu ware, is a subset of Kyo ware but all made in Kyoto.

  • Condition: Condition reports are provided upon request but not included in the object description above. Kindly contact Potomack for condition notes.

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November 18, 2017 10:00 AM EST
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