Sold for €1,170
including Buyer's Premium
Japan, 18th century, Edo period (1615-1868)
Of nearly cylindrical form, the sides gently leaning inwards, and rising from a gently tapered foot with concave base to a short cylindrical neck with lipped rim, covered overall in a lustrous dark brown glaze with a slight olive-green tinge, with splashes of ivory-grey, stopping irregularly above the unglazed base revealing the dark ware, the base with an itokiri mark.
HEIGHT 8.2 cm
Condition: Good condition with minor wear. Small chips to the base, few nicks to the foot, and tiny losses to the base. The shoulder with a small hairline and the base with a 4.5 cm long horizontal crack to the base. The cover is lost.
Provenance: Sotheby’s, Important Japanese Works of Art, 6 May 1981, New York, lot 331. A private collection in New England, United States, acquired from the above. The base with an old label inscribed ‘Kyoto’. The interior with two handwritten notes, ‘sale 4599 lot 331, 63’ and ‘sale 4599, 331. The clay does not look like Kyoto – neither does the glaze, the clay and glaze look like they could be Takatori’.
Auction comparison:
Compare a related Takatori chaire, dated 17th century, Edo period, 10 cm high, at Christie’s, Asobi: Ingenious Creativity, Japanese Works of Art from Antiquity to Contemporary, 15 October 2014, London, lot 17 (sold for GBP 2,000).
Japan, 18th century, Edo period (1615-1868)
Of nearly cylindrical form, the sides gently leaning inwards, and rising from a gently tapered foot with concave base to a short cylindrical neck with lipped rim, covered overall in a lustrous dark brown glaze with a slight olive-green tinge, with splashes of ivory-grey, stopping irregularly above the unglazed base revealing the dark ware, the base with an itokiri mark.
HEIGHT 8.2 cm
Condition: Good condition with minor wear. Small chips to the base, few nicks to the foot, and tiny losses to the base. The shoulder with a small hairline and the base with a 4.5 cm long horizontal crack to the base. The cover is lost.
Provenance: Sotheby’s, Important Japanese Works of Art, 6 May 1981, New York, lot 331. A private collection in New England, United States, acquired from the above. The base with an old label inscribed ‘Kyoto’. The interior with two handwritten notes, ‘sale 4599 lot 331, 63’ and ‘sale 4599, 331. The clay does not look like Kyoto – neither does the glaze, the clay and glaze look like they could be Takatori’.
Auction comparison:
Compare a related Takatori chaire, dated 17th century, Edo period, 10 cm high, at Christie’s, Asobi: Ingenious Creativity, Japanese Works of Art from Antiquity to Contemporary, 15 October 2014, London, lot 17 (sold for GBP 2,000).
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