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Contemporary Ceramic Jar by Nishihata Tadashi

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  • Large Contemporary Ceramic Tsubo Jar by Kai Tsujimura
    Located in Atlanta, GA
    A massive stoneware tsubo floor jar created by Japanese contemporary ceramic artist Kai Tsujimura (1976-). The heavy jar with its impressive volume was made in the tradition of Iga ware with local coarse sandy clay that turned reddish after the firing. It took its shape from heavy medieval storage jars with a wide-open mouth. For a nearly identical form, see an Echizen jar from Heian period (794–1185) in the collection of MET (Accession Number: 1977.261). The surface showcases scattered white crystalized feldspars and a green vitrified ash glaze cascade down the body (known as biidoro in Japanese - after the Portuguese word for glass vidoro). These is a globular shape impressed on the jar. It is a signature practice of the Tsujimura potter family by stacking bowls between the pieces in the kiln during the firing, resulting in an accidental but iconic aethetic (Kai and Yui Tsujimura...
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  • Elegant Shape Contemporary Porcelain Vase by Nishiyama Tadashi
    By Tadashi Nakayama
    Located in Fukuoka, JP
    A beautiful contemporary porcelain vase by the talented Nitten artist, Nishiyama Tadashi. This elegant vase is a stunning addition to any interior design or a collector's collection. The vase features a flowerlike shape with a pure white color that brings a sophisticated and modern feel to any space. This exquisite porcelain vase is in excellent condition and comes with its original signed wooden storage box, which is a valuable addition for any collector or art enthusiast. Nishiyama Tadashi is a renowned Japanese artist born in 1954 in Saga, Japan, and he studied under Living National Treasure Inoue Manji. He has developed his own unique and recognizable style that is admired by many art collectors worldwide. In the year 2000, Nishiyama Tadashi was selected for the Japan Traditional Art Crafts Exhibition, which is a testament to his incredible skill and talent in the field of traditional arts and crafts. He also submitted this particular vase to the Saga Contemporary Ceramics Exhibition at the British Museum, demonstrating his international recognition and acclaim. If you are looking for a statement piece to add to your interior or a valuable collectible...
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  • Large Japanese Contemporary Ceramic Jar from Onda Yaki Kiln
    By Onda Yaki
    Located in Atlanta, GA
    A large Japanese lidded ceramic jar from the kiln of Onda Yaki, circa 2010. The stoneware jar impresses the viewer with a robust bulbous form. Its black body is nearly unglazed but exuberantly splashed with strokes of slip glazes of white, yellow and blue. The visual effect is wonderful that it appears traditional and contemporary at the same time. The tri-color glaze calls to mind the San-Cai from Chinese Tang dynasty, yet the application is akin to abstract painting on canvas. Onda Yaki also spelled as Onta Yaki also spelled Onta, is a type of Japanese pottery produced in and around the village of Onta in Oita Prefecture in Kyushu Island. It was founded in 1705. Closely associated with Mingei folk art, Onda ware was inscribed by the national government in 1995 as an Intangible Cultural Property Background from Pucker Gallery where the jar was exibited and purchased. "In his search for true folk pottery, the Japanese philosopher Soetsu Yanagi...
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  • Antique Ceramic Food Jars
    Located in New York, NY
    Large antique ceramic food jars with beautifully rendered bird and floral imagery. From China, Hebei Province, circa 1900.
    CR430
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  • Massive Ceramic Jar Tsubo by Japanese Potter Tsujimura Yui
    By Tsujimura Yui
    Located in Atlanta, GA
    A massive and magnificent ceramic Tsubo jar by Japanese potter Tsujimura Yui (1975-). Inspired by the techniques and aesthetics of the early medieval Sue ware, the artist hand builds an impressive voluminous oviform, irregular by intention, from a combination clay from both Shigaraki and Iga, coarse by nature and rich in feldspar. Fired on their sides horizontally, the surface of the thick wall tsubo is covered with streaks and drips of natural ash glazes in shades of green and blue, forming an abstract and mesmerizing pattern that resembles geothermal earth activity. Additional ashes are blown during the firing to accentuate the textures. Most recognizably, there are many circular marks scattered on the surface of his archaic looking vessels. That is resulted from using stacked tea bowls to prevent the conjoining of the vessels. After the firing, the stacked vessels are chipped away, leaving behind those circular impression, as well as deep pools of glaze which gather where they were placed. Born in 1975, Tsujimura Yui is the first son of the contemporary ceramic artist Tsujimura Shiro...
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  • Japanese Modern Studio Ceramic Oribe Jar by Ryoji Koie
    By Ryoji Koie
    Located in Atlanta, GA
    A glazed ceramic vessel by Japanese potter Ryoji Koie (1938-2020). Hand-built with intention to be seen as such, the tsubo has a primordial irregular form with a small opening and a swelled body resembling a beehive. The upper body was covered in a glassy green oribe glaze with fine crackles, highlighted with three incised geometrical symbols. The lower body is unglazed and exposed the white clay with marks of the hand-making pinches and kneading along the base. The base also shows highly irregular surface due to the seashell spur marks and clay pitting in the kiln during the firing process. All these occurrences honestly preserved and presented as part of the character of this wonderful modern piece. The jar comes with a plain wooden tomobako box. "One of Japan’s most versatile and forward-thinking contemporary artists, KOIE RYOJI...
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    21st Century and Contemporary Japanese Modern Ceramics

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    Ceramic

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