RESERVED.
An extremely rare Fuji-yama Ko-Kutani dish, the surface covered in a soft, pale ruri (lapis lazuli) glaze and enamelled with a kin-ginsai (gold and silver) stormy scene of Mount Fuji enveloped in dramatically swirling, low-hanging clouds in iron-red and silver with gold bolts of lightening
Ko-Kutani ruri kin-ginsai type, Arita ware, Hizen province, Japan
Edo Period (mid-17th century), Meireki-Manji period
circa 1655-60
Condition:
In pristine original condition.
Measurements:
14.5 cm diamter; 2.0 cm high
The front surface covered in a velvety, pale lapis lazuli glaze featuring a dramatic, stormy view of Mount Fuji with swirling, low-hanging clouds in iron-red and silver highlighted by flashing gold bolts of lightening, the flat rim embellished with silver scrolling tendrils, the reverse undecorated and with a white glaze. An extremely rare example in perfect condition.
When the Chinese kilns at Jingdezgen fell silent after the fall of the Ming Dynasty in 1644, the Dutch East India Company looked to Japan as an alternative supplier for porcelain to be sold in The West. In 1657, the Directors of the East India Company in Amsterdam requested Japanese models and samples of Japanese porcelain as a reaction to the private trade already growing in the 1650s between Japanese merchants and private European traders (Fitski, 2003). These early samples of Japanese porcelain were provided to the Dutch East India Directors by Zacharias Wagenaer, acting as Principal in Japan for the Dutch East India Company (Opperhoofd) in Deshima, who sent 'a case with various kinds of fine porcelain as a sample for the fatherland' (Jorg, p.155) which arrived in Amsterdam in 1658. Duplicates of these samples were retained in Deshima awaiting the Dutch orders. The order was compiled in 1658 and the documents were sent back to Japan aboard the Zwarte Bul which sank in 1659 between Batavia and Japan - leaving Wagenaer uncertain of which porcelains the Directors had chosen. To expediate the trade, Wagenaer had decided to send back an assortment of his own choosing, writing in his report of 10th December 1659: "....I had contracted with a certain person for about 200 pieces after my own invention, to be made curiously on a blue ground with small silver and gold tendrilwork" (T. Volker 1954, p.136). These blue ground pieces called ruri Kutani were among the earliest Japanese porcelains shipped to Europe, according to Dr. Oliver Impey and were only produced for a very short period between circa 1655-1665. The striking early blue ground Arita wares - which Impey suggests may be the origin of the Chinese 'powder blue' of the Kangzi period (Ashmolean Museum, p.95) - are extremely rare but examples exist in the British Museum, the Groningen Museum, and Hampton Court (London, UK).
According to Idemitsu Museum of Arts "It is thought that gold, silver, and silver began to be used in the 1650s as decorations for specially ordered and expensive vessels, and there is a mention of gold, silver, and color in the "Kaku", a document of the art school which notes that "gold and silver decorated pieces under special order were requested by Chinshiki Yuchu, Tanshu Midori, Iribe no Bushi, Noso Kurobei-dono's intermediary, Hatte Mt. On a certain occasion, he presented a Mt. Fuji-shaped pot decorated with gold and silver and a choko cup to Tanshu-sama (the second lord of the Nabe Tame domain, Mitsushige) at his private club. It seems that gold wire decoration had begun by the year 1658. In the case of this gold and silver painting, the overglaze is made of only red paint with plenty of space, creating a tasteful and elegant style. It's unique. Lazuli glaze is known at the end of the Ming dynasty in China and it is clear that it was popular in China at the time. The director of the Dutch trading post in Nagasaki, wrote, 'I have created around 200 pieces of special porcelain decorated with small silver arabesque patterns in the castle ring, to bring to Batavia as samples for my homeland....' This lapis lazuli glazed product is called "Ruri Kutani" and it has been excavated from both the Kutani kiln and the Hizen kiln."
A rare ruri Ko-Kutani pale lapis lazuli dish, Mt Fuji kin-ginsai design c1655
RESERVED.
For more information, please contact
BARASET HOUSE FINE ART
416 666 6295
info@barasethouse.com
REFERENCES
A square dish with ruyi (lapis lazuli) glaze and kin ginsai (gold and silver enamel) decoration of Mount Fuji is found in the Shibata Collection at the Kyushu Ceramic Museum, illustrated in Complete Catalogue of Shibata Collection (2019) no.738.
A dish covered in soft, pale ruyi (lapis lazuli) glaze of the 1655-70 period is found in the Shibata Collection at the Kyushu Ceramic Museum, illustrated in Complete Catalogue of Shibata Collection (2019) no. 816.
A Square ko-Kutani ruri ginsai plate mid-17th century decorated in iron-red enamel, silver and gilt with clouds and Mt. Fuji on a light blue ground, sold Sothebys (New York) Japanese & Korean Works of Art, 16 October 2001, lot 111.