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Antique Japanese Plum Vase by Makuzu (Miyagawa) Kozan

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All Items: Archives:Regional Art:Asian:Japanese: Pre 1920: item # 896906

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Antique Japanese Plum Vase by Makuzu (Miyagawa) Kozan
A large Kenzan style pottery vessel simply titled Kabin, Ume-no-Zu (Vase, Plum Decoration) by Miyagawa Kozan enclosed in the original signed wooden box. The blossoming plum rises from a dark hillside, the white flowers like small moons against the pale crackled glaze. It is signed on the base is a Kenzan style painted signature Kozan, with an impressed seal Makuzu. The vessel is 8 inches (20 cm) tall, roughly 5-1/2 inches (14 cm) diameter and in perfect condition. The name Kozan was granted by Prince Yasui-no-Miya in 1851 in honor of the tea ware produced during the later Edo for the imperial Court by the tenth generation head of the Kyoto pottery family Miyagawa Chozo. The Kozan (Makuzu) kiln as we know it today was established in Yokohama in 1871 by the 11th generation head of the family where he reinvented the family business. He immediately set out on a journey which would propel the Kozan name to International Celebrity status, and send his wares throughout the globe. Pieces produced there were marked Kozan, or Makuzu, the official kilnname, or both. The first son, Hanzan, succeeded as head of the kiln, in 1912, with the father officially retiring to spend more time on his own research and art. Kozan I dies in 1916. The kiln was run by Hanzan through the early Showa era, he officially taking the name Kozan II in 1917, after one year mourning for his fathers passing. Under Hanzan the kiln was commissioned for works to be presented to the Prince of Wales, the 25th wedding anniversary gift for the Taisho emperor and the Showa Emperors coronation gift. The kiln was completely destroyed in the bombing of Yokohama in 1945. For more on this illustrious family see Bridging East and West, Japanese Ceramics from the Kozan Studio by Kathleen Emerson-Dell.


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