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Directory: Japanese: Tea Articles: Accessories (52) |
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Zentner Collection
$1,100.00 A delightful Japanese wood tray in the shape of a lotus leaf. Chiseled Katabori with raised veins and stem and stippled leaf rolled back on sides. The back of the tray is as detailed as the top with an intricate pattern of veins and curved stem. The tray is used in the tea ceremony.
Date: Meiji Period circa 1890 Dimensions:12" X 9" X 1"
Ancient East
$420 DESCRIPTION: A handsome ikebana basket, Meiji Period, crafted of smoked bamboo in a diagonal weave with double wrapped handle. Three vertical bamboo strips reinforce two corners, and the basket rests on a square, open weave base. Excellent condition with no breaks or losses. Ikebana ("living flowers") is the Japanese art of flower arrangement. It is also known as Kado ("way of flowers")...
Dragon's Pearl
$500.00 Unique carved wood vessel for use in Tea Ceremony for flower arrangement, ikebana. Very smoothly polished and lacquered in the inside; standing on three small “feet”. It has a wonderful smooth patina all-over. L. 26 cm x 17 cm. Meiji-Taisho.
Condition: great!
Kodo Arts
$280.00 Quite elegant Taisho Period wagumi Japanese style bamboo flower basket featuring bamboo inserts, susudake bamboo, and a rattan weave on the handle. Excellent condition. 16" tall by 12" wide. Ask for shipping quote.
Kodo Arts
$580.00 Lovely C.1935 half moon bamboo flower basket. Smoked bamboo `susudake` from an old minka farm house hearth roof. Rich patina strips of bamboo woven into the weave. Excellent condition. Ask for shipping quote.
Momoyama Gallery
sorry sold Exceedingly rare early text on the Japanese Tea Ceremony - 210 years old. The only book of the tea ceremony in our family collection. Profusely illustrated with woodblock images depiciting a wide variety of tea accoutrements. A beautiful example of Japanese life and expression, and an exquisite addition for the discriminating collector of Japanese antiques and Tea Ceremony items. Such old books about the tea ceremony are mostly hold in museums...
Momoyama Gallery
$400.00 This is a first class Kashiki of old Shino ware. It is 200 years old ( Edo Period ), beautiful distorted and has a tasteful painting. Kashiki is the general term for bowls or plates to present biscuits and sweets for the tea ceremony. It is an indispensable item for the authentic tea ceremony. There is potter's mark. The name of the artist is Sozan. Nice antique condition with aesthetic inborn kiln cracks and with no repairs...
The Kura
Sold, thank you Lacquer covers the natural curves of this wood tray for use in the service of Sencha leaf Green Tea. It is 10 x 14-1/2 x 1 inches (25.5 x 37 x 2.5 cm). The bottom shows wear typical of use.
The importance of Sencha in the late Edo and Meiji periods cannot be overlooked, and has been studied in depth in the book Tea of the Sages, the Art of Sencha by Patricia Jane Graham.
Momoyama Gallery
Already Sold On offer is this rare type of nezumi mizusashi made of shino-yaki. It dates from the mid to the late Meiji Period and is in perfect condition. There are no damages, cracks and repairs. Size: 17,5 cm height 13 cm diameter 16,5 cm trunk diameter Weight: 1400 g Shipping included
Momoyama Gallery
sold This is a real old Japanese mizusashi made of Oribe clay. It dates from the early Meiji Period. Signed on the bottom from the artist. It is in great condition - no repair, no crack, no water leak. Size: 15 cm height 13 cm diameter 15 cm trunk diameter Weight: 1,3 kg Shipping included
Momoyama Gallery
Sold Nothing I can say can convey the rugged beauty locked up of this Oribe Mizusashi, signed and enclosed in the original signed wooden box...
tomoe art
$450.00 An antique okinawan incense container decorated with a lacquer and inlayed mother of pearl depicting a dragon appearing from clouds. Circa 19th Century. Mother-of-pearl inlay, which is known Raden in Japan was first introduced to Japan during Nara period (710-784). The technique was popularly used with lacquer for artworks such as instruments. It is in good condition with tiny loss of inlayed mother of pearl. The piece accompanied a poulownia wood store box...
Japanese Art Site
SOLD This stunning masterpiece of extraordinary design is an exceedingly rare Edo Period Botankago (Peony Basket) Ikebana Basket for the Tea Ceremony, with original signed box. One of the rarest and most important baskets to come up for sale. Black with a very large handle that separates into five pieces for portability, a fine complex weave and intricate crayfish motif. A rare and important find for the serious Japanese basket connoisseur. 22.5h x 19.25w inches, 57h x 49w cm.
Asian Art By Kyoko
Inquire for Price A fine embroidered purse, probably made to hold tissues at a tea ceremony. The exterior is embroidered with Sagara embroidery (Peking knot), and has a sarasa design of stylized butterflies, birds and flowers. The sarasa (Indian Chintz), first came to Japan through the Nanban trading in the late 16th century and was tremendously favored by the tea masters and some daimyo (regional lords) during the Edo period...
Asian Art By Kyoko
Price on Request A Japanese tissue or cloth holder for a tea ceremony,
finely woven with a diamond design, the interior lined
in leather, all held together with an ivory clasp carved as a
lion's head (shishi) mask, Taisho period.
The Kura
Sold, Thank you! A large Amber glass Mizusashi enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Mizu Utsuwa by Japans top-rated female glass artists, Iwata Itoko. It has a black lacquered wooden lid typical of mizusashi, but a tremendous convoluted form in rich amber which defies simple description. Itoko is one of the top rated glass artists in Japan, and heir to the legacy of Iwata Hisatoshi. The piece is roughly 1 foot (39 cm) in diameter...
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