Teabowl with Rising Sun and Crane mid-19th century Eiraku Hozen Eiraku Hozen was a prominent ceramist during the late Edo period, a time when imperial temples and daimyo households started to commission wares from Kyoto potters. Brightly colored and embellished with glittering gold and silver details, the tea bowl is decorated with motifs of the rising sun and auspicious cranes in celebration of the New Year. With this decoration, Hozen revived the style of Nonomura Ninsei, the most well-known potter of late seventeenth-century Teabowl with Rising Sun and Crane. Eiraku Hozen (Japanese,


Teabowl with Rising Sun and Crane mid-19th century Eiraku Hozen Eiraku Hozen was a prominent ceramist during the late Edo period, a time when imperial temples and daimyo households started to commission wares from Kyoto potters. Brightly colored and embellished with glittering gold and silver details, the tea bowl is decorated with motifs of the rising sun and auspicious cranes in celebration of the New Year. With this decoration, Hozen revived the style of Nonomura Ninsei, the most well-known potter of late seventeenth-century Teabowl with Rising Sun and Crane. Eiraku Hozen (Japanese, 1795–1854). Japan. mid-19th century. Stoneware with cream slip under a white slip and polychrome enamels, gold, and silver over a transparent glaze (Kyoto ware, Eiraku type). Edo period (1615–1868). Ceramics


Size: 4000px × 3000px
Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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