拍品专文
The patriarch of the Matsushita Family, Mr Konosuke Matsushita (1894-1989), was the well-known entrepreneur who founded the electronics company Panasonic Corporation. He was one of the most admired managers in Japan and was often referred to as the 'God of management'. Mr Matsushita's management philosophy was widely adopted among Japanese enterprises and laid the foundation of economic growth in Japan. His influence also carried over into Japanese politics when he founded the Matsushita Seikei Jyuku (The Matsushita Institute of government and management) in 1980. The aim of this institute was to train young politicians and many of today's Japanese politicians carried out their studies at the prestigious Matsushita Institute.
Mr Matsushita has interest in a wide range of art, but he was particularly keen on Japanese tea ceremony. He even introduced Japanese tea ceremony as compulsory training for newly recruited staff in his company. One of his key interests when building up his art collection was art works related to tea ceremony.
The current celadon vase might have served as a flower container in sencha tea ceremony. In sencha tea ceremony, tea leaves are brewed rather than grounded in powder as in traditional Japanese green tea ceremony. Sencha became popular in Japan in the second half of the Edo period, especially among the merchant class, as a response to the rise of tea brewing culture in China since the Ming dynasty. The tea ceremony space was often decorated as a Chinese scholar's studio, comprising various scholar's objects among which archaic bronzes represented aesthetics of the highest quality (see illustration on p. 248). Qing dynasty monochrome porcelain were also frequently included since they are often modelled after archaic bronzes, such as the current celadon-glazed vase. The vase would have been placed on a Chinese zitan or hardwood table. Being one of the most well respected businessmen in Japan with a zealous pursuit of tea ceremony, it is very likely that Mr. Matsushita had also developed a taste for sencha tea and had once used this vase of subliminal beauty in sencha tea ceremony.
Mr Matsushita has interest in a wide range of art, but he was particularly keen on Japanese tea ceremony. He even introduced Japanese tea ceremony as compulsory training for newly recruited staff in his company. One of his key interests when building up his art collection was art works related to tea ceremony.
The current celadon vase might have served as a flower container in sencha tea ceremony. In sencha tea ceremony, tea leaves are brewed rather than grounded in powder as in traditional Japanese green tea ceremony. Sencha became popular in Japan in the second half of the Edo period, especially among the merchant class, as a response to the rise of tea brewing culture in China since the Ming dynasty. The tea ceremony space was often decorated as a Chinese scholar's studio, comprising various scholar's objects among which archaic bronzes represented aesthetics of the highest quality (see illustration on p. 248). Qing dynasty monochrome porcelain were also frequently included since they are often modelled after archaic bronzes, such as the current celadon-glazed vase. The vase would have been placed on a Chinese zitan or hardwood table. Being one of the most well respected businessmen in Japan with a zealous pursuit of tea ceremony, it is very likely that Mr. Matsushita had also developed a taste for sencha tea and had once used this vase of subliminal beauty in sencha tea ceremony.