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Large Arita Imari Sometsuke Charger, Edo

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Directory: Antiques:Regional Art:Asian:Japanese:Porcelain:Pre 1900: item # 324145

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B & C   Antiques
P. O. Box 291
Derby, CT 06418
203-929-7312

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$875

Large Arita Imari Sometsuke Charger, Edo

This wonderful large and heavy Japanese Arita “sometsuke ozara” (blue and white porcelain charger) is hand painted with lush cobalt blue reserves on a pure white ground filled with blue butterflies and floral decorations. Mid-19th century. The largest reserve, in rectangular shape, contains an extensive landscape scene with house, mountains and a lake. Below it is a lozenge-shaped reserve decorated with four horses. Another lozenge-shaped reserve on either side is decorated with geometric diapered patterns around a butterfly medallion. Completing the composition are two round floral medallions with notched rims. The reverse is beautifully decorated with stylized frothing waves above which fly chidori (plovers). Underglaze blue lines encircle the foot, which appears to contain three spur marks.

When the history of the role of utensils used in Japanese eating habits is re-examined, for a long period of time people ate from bowls and small dishes served on individual dining trays. It was not until the 16th century that oversized dishes (“ozara”) first became popular among the wealthy urban elite, and paintings since the Edo period often depicted ozara as an important part of the décor for formal gatherings. In the early 19th century, when ordinary townspeople had become affluent and restaurants multiplied, the popularity of large blue and white dishes became even more widespread. In response to this new affluence, large dishes were produced in some quantity and sold throughout Japan. With the penetration of urban culture to rural districts due to improved land and sea transportation, Arita porcelain became widely distributed, and many of these oversized dishes were used at large dinner parties held by leading families in rural districts. Several similar examples are illustrated in the rare limited edition book “Sometsuke Imari Ozara” (“Imari Ware: Blue and White Large Dishes”) by Masahiko Kawahara, Tokyo,1974. This lovely charger is wonderfully decorative. Condition is excellent, with only a few small kiln burns which are not unusual. Dimensions: 15 ¾” diameter, 2” high.


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