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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
Bowl
Japan, Saga Prefecture; Edo period (1615-1867), about 1670 - 1690
Porcelain painted with overglaze enamels, with traces of gold (Arita ware, Kakiemon style); with 18th-century gilt bronze mounts
H. 5 1/2 in. (14 cm); D. 12 7/8 in. (32.7 cm)
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller 3rd Collection of Asian Art
1979.237
The gilt bronze mounts of this bowl illustrate the transformation of Japanese-manufactured porcelain into European decorative objects. Incised into the base of this bowl is the mark N. 116, which indicates that this piece was one of the more than ten thousand Asian and Meissen ceramics collected by Augustus II, King of Poland and Elector of Saxony (reigned 1694-1733). Inventories of the collection indicate that Kakiemon-style porcelain, often mislabeled as Chinese, were among his favorite ceramics. The interior of this large bowl is painted with two near-identical compositions of brushwood fence, a gnarly rock, and flowering plants on opposite sides, punctuated by a roaming tiger in between. A lean blue dragon circles the center of the dish (see Additional Views). The exterior of the bowl is decorated with two peony sprays.
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