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Directory: Japanese: Tea Articles: Pottery (643) |
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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 )...
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...
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...
Momoyama Gallery
$1200 Sold This is an absolutely rare black Seto chawan ( setoguro chawan ) from the late Momoyama Period, which means the late 16th century or the changeover from Azuchi Momoyama to early Edo. Blackish-brown glaze amalgamates with a wild and roughly thrown body. It is very heavy for a tea bowl, almost 500g. Please note that there is also an interesting kiln mark ( watch image number 3 ) Setoguro yaki is high-fired ware that originated in the late 16th century...
Momoyama Gallery
Sold A unique gold gild chawan with stunning painting, made of Kasama-yaki. It dates from the late Meiji Period and comes with the original box. Perfect condition. Size: 7,5 cm h. - 11 cm d. Shipping included
Momoyama Gallery
sold This beautiful chawan (tea bowl) was made in the oribe style, a more than four hundred year old tradition from the central part of Japan in the ancient Mino province. That tradition was in part influenced by tea master and warrior Furuta Oribe (1545-1615) who developed his own style of tea ceremony. The bowl is very well made and in perfect condition. It dates from the mid Edo Period and has no repairs or damages except inborn kiln cracks...
Momoyama Gallery
Sold Impressing black Raku tea bowl, signed Kichizaemon, of the Raku family. The signed box is labeled “10th generation”, which means Tan-nyu (1795-1854). It represents true Japanese Chado, made from of one of the most famous potter clans in Japan. Most pieces of Kichizaemon Tan-nyu are hold in museums. Tan-nyu Raku was born the second son of Ryonyu, he succeeded as the 10th generation Kichizaemon in 1811...
Momoyama Gallery
$750 Sold As being passionate connaisseurs of Japanese Tea Bowls we always do our best to impress our visitors with tea bowls, which are for sure singular artworks. Here we show and exhibit a treasure of Japanese tea ceremony culture...
Momoyama Gallery
$500 Sold We can present you a pair of gold and silver leaf raku Shimadai Chawans by first class potter Waraku Kawasaki. They have been made in 1975. Shimadai Chawans (always a small and a large one for men and women) are very auspicious in the Japanese Culture. It is used especially for a New Year's day or other auspicious days. Both bowls have a very impressing glaze and will be sold with the original Woodbox with sign and seal of Waraku Kawasaki...
Momoyama Gallery
$450.00 We are glad to can offer you a real authentic piece of real Japanese tea ceremony culture, a Shigaraki-yaki Edo period antique mizusashi (water jar) with its o r i g i n a l and signed antique wooden box. Dated Bunsei 13 (1830). This is one of the rare originals, which are hard to find in and outside Japan. As it is in brilliant condition, it can still be used for the tea ceremony. Height : 14,5 cm Diam...
Momoyama Gallery
sold SIZE : Width 5.1'' , Length 4.6'', Height 3.1'', Weight 290 g + Signed box 290 g This is a tea bowl of Japanese SHIGARAKI pottery ware. This was made about 30 years ago. SHIGARAKI is the pottery of Shiga Prefecture in Japan. It is chosen as one of the oldest 6 potterys in Japan. Shigaraki, Bizen, Iga etc are very popular as pottery of Japanese WABI-SABI. This amazing tea bowl has a very good natural glaze. It presents a lovely sense of view, touch and hold in the hands...
Momoyama Gallery
Sold An absolutely stunning Meiji period black Oribe Tea Bowl covered in thick, ink-black glaze with a floral and abstract design. The slightly irregular kutsu-gata form settles easily into the palm of the hand, with the built up rim resting lightly on the fingers The Chawan has a seal and is signed by the artist...
Momoyama Gallery
sold One of our favorite chawans in our collection is this large E-Shino Tea Bowl, dating from the Meiji Period. Consider it as one of the best masterpieces of Meiji era E-Shino chawans (Pictured Shino tea bowl), molded massively in the elegant Japanized distortion and completed with aesthetic smoothness. The immaculate glaze with yuzu-hada (lemon skin) and the dark underglaze markings are some of the beautiful characteristics of Shino ware, which have been associated with th...
Momoyama Gallery
$3200 Already Sold A spectacular Meiji period Tenmoku Chawan by Eiraku Zengoro decorated in a flamboyant style with precious metals. A golden pine trunk rises, almost entirely obscured by the mass of silver pine needles built up both within and without the bowl. It is most powerful in comparison to the ordinarily subdued Kyo-yaki ware of the Meiji era. The stamp on the base is undoubtedly that of Wazen. The bowl is just less than 5 inches (12.5 cm) diameter and in perfect condition. ...
Momoyama Gallery
Sold Japanese antique Edo Era Teapot of Oribe ware. Size 20 centimeters in height, width 16x12.5 centimeters, 570 grams in weight. Oribe ware (¿—²¿Ÿ† Oribe-yaki) is a type of Japanese pottery most identifiable for its use of green copperglaze and bold painted design. It was the first use of colored stoneware glaze by Japanese potters. It is one of the Mino styles originating in the late 16th century. It takes its name from tea masterFuruta Oribe (1544¨C1615... |