Mindset-Learning

Showing posts with label ware. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ware. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Incense Burner

Incense Burner  in the shape of a Bugaku Dance headgear with overglaze enamel decoration Edo period, Japan.
This is a Kokiyomizu ware incense burner, which is a type of Kyoto ware.  After Nonomura Ninsei perfected the beautifully elegant Japanese style enameled pottery during the Kanbunera (1661-1673), Ninsei-style pottery emerged at Kiyomizu in Kyoto.  Later, when Okuda Eisen (?? – 1811) introduced Chinese-style porcelain, Kiyomizu ware made a drastic change.  The term Kokiyomizu (old Kiyomizu) is applied to the Kiyomizu ware before Eisen.
This incense burner is an example of Kokiyomizu ware ascribed to the seventeenth or eighteenth centure.  Shaped like a  torikabuto, a headgear worn during a bugaku dance, its shape and coloring show sophisticated elegance.

Tea Bowl


Tea Bowl  - Tortoise-shell Tenmoku ware Southern Song dynasty, China.
This is a tenmoku type tea bowl produced at the Jizhou kiln in Jiangxi Province, China.  The name comes from the fact that yellowish brown spots, resembling a tortoise shell, appear on yellowish brown spots, resembling a tortoise shell, appear on the dark brown iron glaze.  Characteristics of this type of tea bowl are that while the outside is covered with brown spots, the inside has a flower, phoenix, leaf or Chinese character design.  This tea bowl has the tortoise-shell sports on the outside and stenciled floral lozenges on the inside.