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JAPANESE OBJECTS FROM THE COLLECTION
Early Japanese Sculpture
Japanese Buddhist Art
Muromachi Period Painting
Kano School Painting
Rinpa Paintings
Japanese Woodblock Prints
Japanese Stoneware
Japanese Porcelains
Two Mukozuke Dishes
Japan, Saga and Nagasaki Prefectures; Momoyama (1573-1615) to Edo (1615-1867) period, late 16th - early 17th century
Stoneware painted with underglaze iron brown (Karatsu ware)
Each, H. 4 1/4 in. (10.8 cm); W. 2 1/4 in. (5.7 cm); D. 2 1/4 in. (5.7 cm)
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller 3rd Collection of Asian Art
1979.229.1-2
These small bowls, or mukozuke, were probably part of an original set of five or more and were meant to hold the accompaniment to rice and soup on an individual diner's tray, often during the kaiseki meal of the tea ceremony. Reedlike bamboo and flowing water plantain decorate opposite sides of the bowls, outlined in brown iron pigment under a thin layer of semiopaque glaze. Such painted Karatsu ware has been excavated from Momoyama-period kiln sites in the Imari region of northern Kyushu. Karatsu ware owes parts of its technological advances and stylistic repertoire to immigrant Korean potters, but, as evidenced by these two bowls, some Karatsu decorative schemes seem to be based on other domestic ceramic traditions, primarily Mino ware.
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