An E-Shino dish (Mukozuke)

MOMOYAMA PERIOD LATE 16TH/EARLY 17TH CENTURY

Details
An E-Shino dish (Mukozuke)
Momoyama period late 16th/early 17th Century
The boldly potted deep dish on three looped feet with an inverted square edged rim decorated in underglaze cobalt blue beneath a thick, bubble suffused and crackled white glaze with bell flowers and reeds, the base with large stilt scars (lacquer repair to rim, slight fritting and three cracks)
15.9cm. wide
Provenance
Morse Collection no. 32
Maria Longworth An American East Coast Museum no. 827.88 enamelled in red to base

Lot Essay

This was part of the collection loaned by Maria Longworth to an American East Coast Museum in 1888

Shino pottery is a unique ware of the Momyama period, due to the combination of two distinctly different aspects. One being slightly complex forms, the other is the use of drawing which is inspired by the natural surroundings of the Shino potters. The Shino artisans were the first Japanese potters to apply the decoration with a brush, and it is not clear whether this is purely a Shino innovation, or that the technique may have been introduced by Korean potters.

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