The Kura - Japanese Art Treasures

Robert Mangold has been working with Japanese antiques since 1995 with an emphasis on ceramics, Paintings, Armour and Buddhist furniture.

Edo p. Utsutsugawa Yaki Chawan Tea Bowl w/ Gold Repair


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Directory: Archives: Regional Art: Asian: Japanese: Pre 1800: Item # 1447318

Please refer to our stock # TCR8142 when inquiring.
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Gold glimmers on the rim against pale concrete tones on this rare mid-Edo period tea bowl from the Utsutsugawa kiln in Nagasaki prefecture, late 17th to early 18th century. Waves of brush strokes decorate the outside, while the white slip cascades from the rim in withering streaks within. A kutsuki on the side testifies to some event which happened during the firing, where another piece of pottery collapsed against the side, fusing and causing the bowl to deform. This force created a crack where the bowl bent, which has now been enhanced with gold. It comes enclosed in a custom made modern wooden collectors box titled Utsutsugawa Kama Kutsu-Gata Chawan. The bowl is 8.5 x 14 x 7 cm (3-1/2 x 6 x 3 inches. Originally a kiln flaw, possibly once discarded, it was rescued and repaired with a sumptuous design of gold powder on lacquer.
Utsutsugawa-yaki (also Utsutsukawa) originated in Nagasaki in the late 17th century. It is said it began when Tanaka Gyobusaemon (Soetsu) opened a kiln around 1690. It is characterized by brown orange clay with a heavy iron content and was most often decorated with Brush strokes in white slip. Although at one time it was called the Ninsei of the West, the manufacture lasted only about 50 years due to the financial aspect of the clan, and it disappeared until the later Meiji period, when there was an attempted revival, but that too failed to last due to pressures of modernization. In modern times the art was revived by Yokoishi Gagyu, and has been named an important cultural property of Nagasaki Prefecture.