Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Red Ceramic Bowl with Oriental Motif

In Asian > Asian Bowls > Show & Tell.
Asian Bowls112 of 486Rice Bowl lMetal found on Okinawa beach around 1952Chinese / Japanese Bowl
3
Love it
0
Like it

auraaura loves this.
AdeleCAdeleC loves this.
fortapachefortapache loves this.
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 6 years ago

    Walburn
    (21 items)

    This red ceramic bowl was donated to our thrift store. We are trying to discover what it is? Any help would be appreciated.

    Mystery Solved
    logo
    Asian Bowls
    See all
    Antique Famille Verte Kangxi period Tea Bowl SE Asia Chinese Porcelain
    Antique Famille Verte Kangxi period...
    $152
    Antique Chinese Famille Rose Porcelain Dream of the Red Chamber Bowl 19th C
    Antique Chinese Famille Rose Porcel...
    $126
    Rare Ca 1600-1660 Chinese Porcelain Ming Period Kosometsuke Bowl Copper Red
    Rare Ca 1600-1660 Chinese Porcelain...
    $441
    Chinese Famille Rose Porcelain Bowl & Cover Yongzheng C18th.
    Chinese Famille Rose Porcelain Bowl...
    $43
    logo
    Antique Famille Verte Kangxi period Tea Bowl SE Asia Chinese Porcelain
    Antique Famille Verte Kangxi period...
    $152
    See all

    Comments

    1. ho2cultcha ho2cultcha, 6 years ago
      this is a very nice Kutani bowl from Japan. i think it is from the Meiji period, but possibly older. congratulations!
    2. Walburn Walburn, 6 years ago
      We are trying to discover more about this red ceramic bowl with scenes of men painting and mountains.
    3. ho2cultcha ho2cultcha, 6 years ago
      do a search on Kutani, or 'how to determine age or value of Kutani ware'.
    4. ho2cultcha ho2cultcha, 6 years ago
      the side decorations actually look 18th century - which would make it Edo period. so do the lapids around the base.
    5. Walburn Walburn, 6 years ago
      Thank you. I was able to decipher the Sei is the artist of this Kutani bowl.
    6. ho2cultcha ho2cultcha, 6 years ago
      try to find it here: http://www.gotheborg.com/marks/20thcenturyjapan.shtml
    7. apostata apostata, 4 years ago
      well you have to be my eyes , but as far as i can see H2O did an excellent job and some great addenda


      first of all , i think there is no kutani revival before -1820-1830, so it actually rules out all the early and mid time edo

      second i think this is a kutani tsukuri, but the strange thing is its marked the meijji way , in the old way the bottom mark has on the left a PAYOS( like the israelian religious people)

      still i believe H2O the whole bowls breaths late EDO the color combination, the soft orange and grey and otherwise i see no explination of the for the stolen daoguang equivalent lapids, hard to say 1840-1850
    8. apostata apostata, 2 years ago
      sloppy work of me because i ( maybe we) missed the point here

      it is an kutani sei, it is not an artist , but japanese word for made

      this is what happening, there are three characters , so what is missing the kiln characters, so actually we narrowed it down , to the status of generic ware

      then we have to narrow , we don,t need to narrow it down to kinrande , because , because the application is not there it is of non importance

      so the generic down narrowing concerns the zo versus sei

      the frequentie over kutani sei could be earlier meijji then the frequentie over zo the frequenty over sei is mainly 1860-1880 and over zo is 1900

      JAPANESE KUTANI WARE IDENTIFICATION & MARKS , Blue Cherry Antiques

      i did,not knew by the way , i have to run it , i could not find what is called significant standard deviation but at least we got the parameters
    9. apostata apostata, 2 years ago
      bit of a dull story yawn yawn , sleep . sleep, don,t wake up grandma etc
      actually you might not noticed , the 2 and the 3 characters kutani are narrowed at least down to the so called bottom parameter (2)
    10. Walburn Walburn, 2 years ago
      An interesting story non the less apostata!! Thank you for the clues.

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.