Japanese Rare Chinese Porcelain Marks
Arita imitating chinese chenghua mark.
Japanese rare chinese porcelain marks. By 1653 the first shipload of blue and white ware ranging from jugs and tankards to vases and apothecary bottles departed from nagasaki on ships bound for europe and a new japanese industry was born. Transformed style of seal mark hard to make out the meaning but could be hall of hundred tortoises. Porcelain with marks imitating chinese marks of the ming period were made at the arita kiln during the 19th century and possible earlier. The marks do only appear on later japanese porcelain and on chinese export porcelain destined for japan.
Philip s bond street chinese and japanese porcelain 19th november 1999 lot 6. The john drew collection. Sei ka nensei chenghua period make 成化年製 attributed to the chinese ming dynasty chenghua period 1465 1487. The mark on the base in red shows exactly the mark on this website for ming zhi meiji period plus two separate marks one in blue offset box which is like a ring with floral top and another red box containing a mark that looks like a u or a c depending on what angle you look at it from.
See more ideas about pottery marks pottery chinese pottery. The content of those marks remained the same over the centuries. It is 20th century and could quite possibly be a japanese mark imitating a chinese. Reign marks are not limited to chinese porcelain they can be found on anything from jades to lacquerware from bronzes to cloisonné enamels.
Decorated with three chilong dragons in blue and white the center with anhua decorated lingzhi fungus. Guest gray also deals in antique japanese porcelain lacquer metalwork and ivory. A rare ming porcelain dish four character longqing mark and of the period. The collection largely consists of chinese porcelain and works of art from the han through to the qing dynasties with a particular emphasis on ming ceramics kangxi blue and white porcelain famille verte porcelain and famille rose porcelain.
An item with such a name mark usually means that it either is an old chinese item made for the japanese market or that it was made in japan itself most likely in the 19th century or later. The position of the mark would depend on the piece itself but generally speaking for vessels like vases bowls or plates it can be found on the base but there are instances where pieces bear a single line mark to the rim or even on the interior. Mar 23 2019 explore lucy baker s board asian pottery marks on pinterest.