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Karatsu Ware Bowl (Mukôzuke)

Japanese

Artwork Details

Karatsu Ware Bowl (Mukôzuke)
17th century - 19th century
Japanese
stoneware with underglaze iron painting
3 1/2 in. x 3 1/4 in. x 3 1/4 in. ( 8.9 cm x 8.3 cm x 8.3 cm )
Bequest of Margaret Watson Parker
1954/1.542

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Description

Karatsu is one of the many kilns in western Japan that was established by Korean potters in the sixteenth century. To this day, the products of these kilns exhibit a distinctively different aesthetic from those of central Japan. This bowl reflects its Korean ancestry in the simple underglaze design and the transparent yellow-green glaze, reminiscent of continental celadons.
Mukôzuke is the name for a deep bowl used in the many-course banquet that is part of the full tea ceremony.
Exhibited in "Japanese Costumes & Ceramics, Past & Present," October 2001 February 2002. Maribeth Graybill, Senior Curator of Asian Art

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