On view

Welcome Gallery
David Nasher Haemisegger Gallery

Shino tea bowl,

1803–1959

Kitaōji Rosanjin, 1883–1959; born Kyoto, Japan; died Yokohama, Japan; active Tokyo and Kyoto, Japan
Japanese
Shōwa era, 1926–1989
1998-839
Takaezu met Rosanjin on her 1955–56 trip to Japan to learn Japanese pottery techniques. Rosanjin, a respected calligrapher, printmaker, ceramicist, and gourmet restaurateur, began designing and decorating pieces inspired by antique Japanese ceramics for his popular Tokyo restaurant. His openness to experimentation, and his synthesis of the culinary and ceramic arts, likely resonated with Takaezu, who later stated, “In my life I see no difference between making pots, cooking, and growing vegetables. They are all so related.” This wheel-thrown brazier, a type of hibachi traditionally made of either ceramic or a hollow log, is an example of Rosanjin’s interpretation of yellow Seto ware. Popularized in the sixteenth century, when it was first used to make objects for the Japanese tea ceremony, Seto ware is made from white clay glazed with ash to create a yellow tint.

Information

Title
Shino tea bowl
Dates

1803–1959

Medium
Glazed stoneware
Dimensions
h. 9.2 cm., diam. approx. 14 cm. (3 5/8 x 5 1/2 in.)
Credit Line
The John B. Elliott, Class of 1951, Collection
Object Number
1998-839
Place Made

Asia, Japan

Culture
Materials

–1998 John B. Elliott (Princeton, NJ), by bequest to the Princeton University Art Museum, 1998.