Tea Storage Jar, mid- to late 1600s. Nonomura Ninsei (Japanese, active 1600s). Stoneware with white glaze (Shigaraki style); diameter: cm (11 5/16 in.); overall: cm (11 1/8 in.). Shigaraki ware is recognized for its warm orange color, asymmetrical round forms, and irregular natural ash glazes. These features were largely unintentional on the part of their makers, whose principal goal was a functional jar. Some tea masters employed Shigaraki vessels as found objects—items appropriated from one context for use in a new one—manifesting effortless and imperfect beauty. In Nonomura Ninse
Tea Storage Jar, mid- to late 1600s. Nonomura Ninsei (Japanese, active 1600s). Stoneware with white glaze (Shigaraki style); diameter: cm (11 5/16 in.); overall: cm (11 1/8 in.). Shigaraki ware is recognized for its warm orange color, asymmetrical round forms, and irregular natural ash glazes. These features were largely unintentional on the part of their makers, whose principal goal was a functional jar. Some tea masters employed Shigaraki vessels as found objects—items appropriated from one context for use in a new one—manifesting effortless and imperfect beauty. In Nonomura Ninsei’s take on Shigaraki, though, careful symmetry is used as a backdrop for deliberately subtle and pleasing deviations such as would appeal to a tea master interested in refined rusticity.
Size: 3400px × 3212px
Photo credit: © CMA/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
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