A SET OF FIVE STONEWARE FOOD DISHES (MUKOZUKE)
A SET OF FIVE STONEWARE FOOD DISHES (MUKOZUKE)
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A SET OF FIVE STONEWARE FOOD DISHES (MUKOZUKE)

MINO WARE, ORIBE TYPE, MOMOYAMA PERIOD (EARLY 17TH CENTURY)

Details
A SET OF FIVE STONEWARE FOOD DISHES (MUKOZUKE)
MINO WARE, ORIBE TYPE, MOMOYAMA PERIOD (EARLY 17TH CENTURY)
The irregular shaped dishes decorated in over glaze green enamel and underglaze iron oxide with blossoms and squares (masu tsunagi) on the interior and drying fishing net (aboshi) on the exterior, covered with a milky transparent glaze, set on three loop feet
4 7/8 in. (12.3 cm.) wide each approx.
Provenance
Kokon. Inc., New York

Brought to you by

Takaaki Murakami (村上高明)
Takaaki Murakami (村上高明) Vice President, Specialist and Head of Department | Korean Art

Lot Essay

Oribe vessels are named for the radical unorthodoxy of the influential warlord and tastemaker Furuta Oribe (1543/44–1615), who had a keen interest in tea culture. It was formed by molding, then the body of white clay was covered with a cool, copper-green glaze and decorated in iron oxide. Known as Ao-Oribe, this type of Oribe works decorated with green glaze was the most popular type throughout the history of the Oribe ware. For a dish in the same form excavated from the Nakanomachi site in Kyoto, see Shino and Oribe (Tokyo: Idemitsu Museum of Arts, 2007), exh. cat. Pl. 190.

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