Légende
Ginger vessel with lid, Nagoya Shippô Kaisha 1871–1890. Japanese, Meiji period c. 1870–1880. Porcelain cloisonné totai-shippo technique, height 12.4 cm, diameter 9.6 cm. A small ovoid vase with a round flattened lid; outer surface covered with a lemon-yellow glaze with a decorative grid of crackles; interior and bottom are white covered with a transparent glaze. Decorated with a naturalistic bean-vine motif with greenish-brown leaves and pink flowers, loosely twining around the body and reaching the lid. Motif executed using cloisonné enamel with brass wires and multiple shades of green and brown; motif was carved into the surface before enameling totai-shippo. Signature in cobalt underglaze: Nihon Shippo Kaisha sei zo; overglaze iron-red rhombus cartouche with the sign sho presumed exporter’s mark. Around 1868 Tsukamoto Kaisuke 1828–1887 developed this porcelain cloisonné method; examples were also made by Takeuchi Chubei and Suzuki Seiichiro, and the object may possibly be by Takeuchi Chubei though it is unsigned., A rounded ceramic jar with a lid sits on a reflective surface; the jar is predominantly yellow with a finely crazed glaze and is decorated with winding green vines and large green heart-shaped leaves, along with a few smaller bluish-green leaves and a couple of brown seed pod shapes; the lid shares the same yellow background and vine motif and the jar shows thin dark outlining around the painted botanical elements; the visible colors include yellow, green, bluish-green, brown, white, and gray, with the surrounding background and reflection appearing gray.
Crédit
Photo12/Liszt Collection
Notre référence
LZT26A20_498
Licence
Droits gérés
Format disponible
80.2Mo (1.5Mo) / 41.6cm x 48.3cm / 4914 x 5701 (300dpi)