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Directory: Japanese: Tea Articles (1158)




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Japanese : Tea Articles : Pottery : Pre 1492 item #1353407 (stock #0362)
Momoyama Gallery
sold

Japanese Tokoname Yama Chawan (literally 'Mountain Tea Bowl'), biscuit firing ware with impressive natural glaze and slightly distorted form. It dates back to the Kamakura Period (1185 - 1333).

Size: 4 cm height x 15,6 cm (max) in diameter.

Shipping included
Japanese : Tea Articles : Pottery : Pre 1492 item #1457494 (stock #0527)
Momoyama Gallery
sold

Japanese Yama Chawan (literally 'Mountain Tea Bowl'), biscuit firing ware with impressive natural glaze and slightly distorted form. It dates back to the Kamakura Period (1185 - 1333). Highlight is the inside design with a Japanese Koi image which was added by a former owner as a kind of Kintsugi to close a damage on the inside surface...

Japanese : Tea Articles : Pottery : Pre 1700 item #1480258 (stock #TRC230626)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
$1,935.00


A stylized grass motif painted in ferrous pigment across each side and on the inside of this mukozuke serving dish marks it as being more likely produced in Karatsu as opposed to having come out of a Mino kiln. Though very similar styles and techniques were utilized during the late 16th or early 17th C. when this would have been produced; the color, distribution of glaze, and patterning suggest Karatsu...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Pre 1950 item #1452234 (stock #TRC210921)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
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Flower arranging is one of the great arts that Japan has managed to take to ever greater heights of refinement over its long history. Here we have a classic example of a kake-hanaire (hanging flower vase) fashioned from bamboo by a lineage of craftsmen that started in 1578 with the first Kuroda Shogen...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Accessories : Pre 1950 item #1478196 (stock #TRC240119)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
$2,250.00


Handwoven with delicate precision, this Japanese bamboo ikebana basket showcases the beauty of traditional bamboo weaving and the elegance of classic Chinese design that much of Japanese traditional art is based on. Its sturdy construction and balanced proportions make it perfect for ikebana arrangements, merging floral artistry with cultural aesthetics...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Pottery : Pre 1492 item #1353242 (stock #TRC1645)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
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The gray-blue celadon displays finely crackled glazing with areas slightly darkened by time. A faint pattern made of white inlay can be seen along the upper rim, complimented in several areas by antique kintsugi repairs. The maki-e gold repair at the base—with its design of half waves and half flowering vines—though quite old, seem not quite so old as the repairs along the rim...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Pottery : Pre 1900 item #1356331 (stock #TRC199472)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
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This piece features a warm golden crackled glaze with several patches of lighter pigmentation and a number of gold and silver repairs. The inside of the bowl is especially inviting, showing a magnificent patina developed over many decades of use...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Pottery : Pre 1980 item #1307748 (stock #TRC1547)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
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This lovely white Hagi chawan rests firmly on a wari kodai or “split foot.” The crackled milky glaze varies in consistency across the curves and contours of the bowl with some areas tending towards a faint brown, adding an interesting dimension to the landscape.

The creator of this piece Matsuura Mugen (1944 - ) has spent his life in the pursuit of perfecting the art of Hagi...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Pottery : Pre 1800 item #1430863 (stock #TRC210226)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
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A beautiful example of a Hakeme style bowl, this one quite rare as it was made around 200 years ago by the son of the founder of the Dohachi line of potters. Traditionally decorated using a brush made from rice straw, a white slip is applied to the darker clay body with a wide sweeping stroke to achieve the effect seen here...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Pre 1900 item #1355519 (stock #TRC1849)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
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An excellent example of Japanese rustic charm that transcends its humble origins to embody a refined artistic work, this mizusashi, or fresh water pot used in tea ceremony, displays a beautiful natural ash glaze that includes dazzling ochres, browns, grays, and yellows splashed across the intentionally rough and contoured ceramic landscape.

Iga-ware pottery dates back to 7th and 8th century and—like so many other pottery styles in Japan—takes its name from the region where it wa...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Pottery : Pre 1800 item #1332157 (stock #TRC1614)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
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Oribe is a visual style named after the late-16th-century tea master Furuta Oribe (1544-1615). Kuro Oribe (as pictured here) with their jet-black glazes and feldspar ornamentation tend toward the minimalistic, abstract; and, some would say, Zen-like aesthetic...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Pre 1900 item #1350901 (stock #TRC1638)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
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With a sturdy foot firmly grounded, the upper rim of this piece rises and falls, somewhat reminiscent of a mountain path. Combined with the plum blossoms floating on the white background, these elements together suggest balance and harmony.

Oribe is a visual style named after the late-16th-century tea master Furuta Oribe (1544-1615)...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Pre 1900 item #1358470 (stock #TRC220307)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
$1,575.00
Stemming from the philosophy of wabi-sabi—often described as the beauty found in the imperfection and transience of the world—cracks and repairs in a work of pottery are often seen as highlighting the history and importance of a ceramic object. Practitioners of tea in particular are fond of reminding us that works repaired with lacquer and gold such as the one featured here become more resilient and beautiful for having been damaged...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Contemporary item #1383853 (stock #TRC18591)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
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Made from ferrous rich Bizen clay covered in an ashen feldspar glaze, this non-conventional Shino tea bowl is a variety known as “Beni” or crimson red. Distinctively modern yet emanating a primal vitality, the form harkens back to the very origins of ceramic exploration in Japan. The influence of Momoyama potters and greats such as Koetsu can be seen in the dynamic edges of the clay body...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Contemporary item #1448610 (stock #TRC230303)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
$1,665.00
First born son to Living National Treasure Isezaki Jun, Koichiro (b. 1974) has quickly made a name for himself as an independent artist. Not content to rely solely on family reputation, he has set off on his own path, making innovations in clay and also in the ideas and principles surrounding his craft...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Contemporary item #1467888 (stock #TRC210701)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
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Elegantly balanced on a slenderly proportioned foot, this piece by Bizen native Kondo Masahiko displays a surprising level of skill for a potter still in the process of making a name for himself. With swirling ash glaze and a dazzling ceramic landscape, this piece is perfect for tea practitioners and collectors alike.

Born in Okayama prefecture in 1971, Kondo fashions his Bizen pieces in a traditional wood-fired kiln in the township of Ushimado...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Contemporary item #1440183 (stock #TRC210111)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
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A beautiful example of modern Bizen-ware—with a thick feldspar glaze partially covering the clay body allowing the natural ash glaze underneath to show through in areas...
Japanese : Tea Articles : Pre 2000 item #1440331 (stock #TRC210223)
Kyoto Ceramics and Fine Art
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The potter who made this exquisite Oribe tea bowl came to be master of his craft in a rather unusual way. Born into a potting family and eventually taking over as the 6th generations head of the kiln. He carried on the family tradition while incorporating ancient potting techniques and methods from foreign lands. Here in this Oribe piece, you can detect a deeper than usual luster to the black glaze, a certain uniqueness in the style of painting, and a golden hue to the feldspar contrast medium, ...
 
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