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  1. Archive
  2. Japanese, Islamic and Indian
  3. Antique Japanese Porcelain

Japanese Arita Galley Pot, Edo Period (1603-1868)

W301 Japanese Arita galley pot, Edo Period (1603-1868)
W301 Japanese Arita galley pot, Edo Period (1603-1868)
W301 Japanese Arita galley pot, Edo Period (1603-1868)
W301 Japanese Arita galley pot, Edo Period (1603-1868)
W301 Japanese Arita galley pot, Edo Period (1603-1868)
W301 Japanese Arita galley pot, Edo Period (1603-1868)
W301 Japanese Arita galley pot, Edo Period (1603-1868)
Ref: W301
Archive item - not for sale

Japanese Arita galley pot, Edo Period (1603-1868), c.1660, of bulbous form, the body decorated to one side in enamels with flowering peony heads emerging from rockwork, to the other with iris, all above a band of iron red spearheads, concentric bands of blue to the top and bottom and fern pattern in iron red and gilt to the handle, height: , The term ‘galley pot’ was originally used to refer to the ceramics brought into Europe via the Mediterranean in long, shallow galley ships. In Japanese culture, the peony is a symbol of good fortune and honour.


Condition:

some faults see images


Notes:

Kakiemon (Japanese: 柿右衛門) is a style of Japanese porcelain, with overglaze decoration called "enameled" ceramics. It was originally produced at the factories around Arita, in Japan's Hizen province (today, Saga Prefecture) from the Edo period's mid-17th century onwards.[1] The style shares much in common with the Chinese "Famille Verte" style. The quality of its decoration was highly prized in the West and widely imitated by major European porcelain manufacturers during the Rococo period.

Kakiemon is a term that generates some confusion, being the name of a family, one or more kilns, and a brightly-coloured overglaze style broadly imitating Chinese wares. The style originated with the family, whose kilns were the main producers of it, but other kilns also made it, and the Kakiemon kilns made other styles. Both the palette and style, and very probably the kiln, were in place by the 1680s. The style is a sub-type of what is called in the West Imari ware, the overglaze coloured variety of the broader grouping Arita ware, dominant in Japanese export porcelain in its first successful period, up to the 1740s.[2]

The style was quickly copied by the new European porcelain factories that appeared in the 18th century, such as Meissen in Germany, Chantilly in France and Chelsea in England. The Chinese also began to copy the style for Chinese export porcelain. By about 1760 it had largely fallen from fashion in Europe. wikipedia

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