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JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY / KISHU WARE TEA BOWL CHAWAN / KINSAI IROE / PINWHEEL PATTERN
Limited time 50% OFF!
$45
Regular $90
ConditionExcellent
MaterialCERAMICS
Excellent condition.
Note : fragile.
This item will be shipped as is (i.e. the same condition it was in when originally purchased from the antique dealer).
* Items come with everything pictured (e.g. boxes, accessories, etc. if any).
* Please read through our store policy pages before ordering.
Our store primarily sells vintage & antique wares.
Please understand that age affects both item condition and value as a collectible.
Check the condition in each photo carefully to help you decide whether to bid or buy.
If there is anything specific you would like to know about this item, please contact us.

Item Code:7604987

Size (cm)

サイズ 口径 高台径 高さ 長さ
  12.4 5.5 8      
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[Iroe (polychrome pottery)]
A technique of decorating ceramics.
Iroe refers to painting motifs or patterns using lead-based red, yellow and green color glazes on the surface of glazed and fired earthenwares, porcelains, and firing them again at a lower temperature (around 800 degrees C) so the colored glaze melts onto the underglaze.
Arita ware is one of the representative iroe ceramics in Japan.

[ Kinsai ]
Gold paint/dyes used for ceramics and fabrics.
[Kishu Ware]
Kishu ware is ceramics produced in the Kishu domain (present Wakayama prefecture) in the Edo period. It started in the Bunmei era (1818-1830) under the patrontage of the Kishu Tokugawa family. There were many Kishu ware kilns there, however Kishu ware kilns were closed after abolition of the han system was held in 1871. Once the history of Kishu ended in 1878, although Sehou Samukawa I, the master of Aoigama kiln revived Kishu ware in 1937.