Bowl with Japanese anemone design in overglaze enamel and sprayed underglaze black ink, and in sumi-hajiki .

H 15.2 / ø 46.0 cm,Year.2016
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  • Ceramics(Living National Treasure)
  • Price Range $1,000 - 34,000
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  • Awards at Japan Kōgei Assoc. Exhibitions : 4

Description

  • Category
    Ceramics
  • Dimensions
    H 15.2 / ø 46.0 cm
  • Year of creation
    2016
  • Rarity
    Unique

Techniques Used

Overglaze enamel

Overglaze enamel decorations (iro-e, literally “colored pictures”) are achieved by applying designs to the surface of already glazed and fired porcelain. The decorations are painted over the glaze, and the piece is fired again at a low temperature of approximately 800℃. The pigments used in traditional overglaze decorations are known as wa enogu (“Japanese paints”) and offer a palette of colors such as red, blue, yellow, green, and purple. Overglaze enameling may also be done with Western pigments (yō enogu).

Ink resist decorations

Ink resist (sumihajiki) techniques developed in the seventeenth century as a method for reserving white spaces in designs on Nabeshima ware, a type of high-quality gift porcelain fired in the Saga Nabeshima domain’s official kilns. Sumi ink is used to paint designs on the vessel, over which colored pigments are then applied. The ink, which contains animal glue, repels the water in the pigment, preventing it from adhering to the body of the piece. When the vessel is bisque fired, the ink evaporates, leaving behind white designs in its place.

“Snowflake” ink resist decorations

The “snowflake” ink resist (sekka sumihajiki) technique is an original innovation by Imaizumi Imaemon XIV. The technique combines white slip decorations and brush-painted ink-resist designs. By using a slip that is paler than the porcelain, the technique produces subtle expressions. Successfully combining materials with varying contraction rates requires special consideration, both in respect to the application of designs and the firing temperatures used to evaporate the ink resists.

Selected exhibitions

  • The 63th Japan Traditional Kōgei Exhibition (2016)
  • Selected
photo Bowl with Japanese anemone design in overglaze enamel and sprayed underglaze black ink, and in sumi-hajiki .
Bowl with Japanese anemone design in overglaze enamel and sprayed underglaze black ink, and in sumi-hajiki . Imaemon Imaizumi XIV
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