Kato Takuo (1917-2005) Kin-Yo Flat Tea Bowl
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All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Pottery : Bowls : Contemporary item #1488021
Please Feel free to contact as for more information. We have carefully screened and selected each work as a masterpiece unto itself and feel very confident you will agree.
All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Pottery : Bowls : Contemporary item #1488804
Elegance in coloration and form this Koro Tea Bowl by Tamba superstar Ichino Masahiko enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Tanba Akadobe Wan and including the original exhibition invitation which this piece is featured...
All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Pottery : Bowls : Contemporary item #1489777 (stock #TRC240205)


This piece was fired in the kilns of one of Kyoto’s most prolific Raku-yaki workshops by an artist known as Heian Shoraku. In 1905, the first generation Shoraku established a kiln near the famous Kiyomizu temple, nestled at the foot of the eastern mountains in Kyoto. In 1945, the kiln was moved to Kameoka near Yada shrine where it remains today...
All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Pottery : Bowls : Contemporary item #1490595
Ash coated with silver striated slip's sake cups by Iguchi Daisuke enclosed in their original signed wooden boxes and dating to 2024.
From the artist this year.
Size,1 D 8.8 cm H 9.1 cm
Size,2 D 7.9 cm H 5.9 cm
Condition, New

Iguchi Daisuke was born in 1975 in Tochigi , After graduating the Tohoku University of Art & Design in 1998, studied in Kyoto under Imai Masayuki...
All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Pottery : Bowls : Pre 1980 item #1490597
Rare Chawan crafted by the eminent Hamada Shoji (1894-1978), showcasing the exquisite use of iron pigments.


Size:
Height: 7.9cm
Width: 15.1cm

In excellent condition.
Comes with a signed wooden box.

Shoji Hamada was a key figure in Japanese ceramics, famous for his involvement in the Mingei (Folk Craft) movement...
All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Pottery : Bowls : Contemporary item #1492228
A superbly crafted and balanced trumpeting form by legendary tea bowl creator Sugimoto Sadamitsu enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Ido Chawan. The bowl reflects the aesthetics of those imported Korean wares preferred by Sen-no-Rikyu in the Momoyama era. It has a bold, strong foot which rests perfectly on the table, both grounding the bowl and yet allowing it a sense of flight, as if the moment will soon be gone (and it will indeed!)...