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Kura Monzen Gallery

19th century Mizoroyaki Chawan Tea Bowl from Kyoto ー"御菩薩焼 茶碗"

19th century Mizoroyaki Chawan Tea Bowl from Kyoto ー"御菩薩焼 茶碗"

Regular price ¥105,000 JPY
Regular price Sale price ¥105,000 JPY
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An elegant bowl decorated with bell-flowers from the Mizoro kilns in North Kyoto dating from the later 19th century enclosed in a period wooden box and bearing the Mizoro seal impressed into the base. Color has seeped into the finely crackled earthen glaze, adding a delicate sense of age. It is 13 cm (5 inches) diameter, 8 m (just more than 3 inches) tall and in excellent condition.

Many people think of Kiyomizu-yaki as the only type of pottery in Kyoto, but there are other types of pottery such as Awata-yaki, Otowa-yaki, Iwakura-yaki, Asahi-yaki, Raku-yaki, and Mizoro-yaki. Mizoro-yaki is a type of Kyo-yaki that was fired in Atago-gun, North of central Kyoto. There are many mysteries and rumors about the origins of the pottery. According to Tauchi Baiken's "Thoughts on Ceramics" written in the Ansei era, Ninsei Nonomura started Mizoro ware. Other documents, from the Enpo period, Taihei of Mizoro Village became an apprentice at Higashiyama Seikanji Yaki Ichimonjiya, and then returned to the village and opened a kiln. According to the "100 Year History of Kyo Yaki", it was established in 1554 AD by Yozo Unsonin. In any event, it is generally agreed to have begun by the mid 17th century, and lasted for about two hundred years.

 

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