Dish, from a set of ten with original box

Detail of a pattern
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At A Glance

  • Period

    1740-1755
  • Geography

    Higuchi or Kakiemon kiln, Nangawara, Arita, Saga prefecture, Japan
  • Material

    Porcelain with cobalt under clear glaze and enamels over celadon glaze
  • Dimension

    H x W x D: 3.1 x 22.5 x 22.5 cm (1 1/4 x 8 7/8 x 8 7/8 in)
  • Accession Number

    F1993.19.1
  • EDAN ID

    edanmdm:fsg_F1993.19.1

Object Details

  • Description

    The dish was thrown on a potter's kickwheel and then shaped over a bisque-fired clay mold. The footrim was then trimmed. The molded ten-lobed rim is edged with iron brown and coated with green (celadon) glaze, while the interior is painted in cobalt pigment with a design of iris blooming by a stream, under a colorless transparent glaze.
    Overglaze enamels are used to outline the iris and wave pattern with gold and to render an auspicious design around the celadon rim of the crane and hairy-tailed tortoise (paired symbols of longevity) and pine and bamboo.
  • Label

    Wooden boxes were used to store ceramics and other precious objects. Inscriptions outside the boxes identified the contents. Often, additional inscriptions inside the box lid or on the base recorded the history of ownership or other details. This box is labeled to contain "a set of ten sashimi dishes" that belonged to the Kashiwaya, probably a fine restaurant or inn, as of 1755, when the box was inscribed and dated. The prized delicacy, known as sashimi--precisely cut raw filets of seasonal fish, with a dipping sauce--flourished chiefly as a specialty of professional chefs. The blue design of irises on these dishes, showing faintly through the thin slices of translucent fish, would have created a cooling visual effect especially appreciated in early summer.
  • Provenance

    From 1950s – 1993
    Private collection, purchased in Japan in the 1950s. [1]
    From 1993
    Freer Gallery of Art, gift of a private collector. [2]
    Notes:
    [1] According to the donor, object was purchased in Japan in the 1950s.
    [2] See Freer Gallery of Art Purchase List after 1920 file, Collections Management Office.
  • Collection

    Freer Gallery of Art Collection
  • Exhibition History

    Cornucopia: Ceramics of Southern Japan (December 19, 2009 to January 9, 2011)
    Dinner for Five: Japanese Serving Dishes for Elegant Meals (March 4 to October 21, 2001)
    Telling Tales in Japanese Art (November 23, 1996 to August 14, 1997)
    Japanese Art (April 13 to November 21, 1995)
  • Previous custodian or owner

    Anonymous
  • Origin

    Higuchi or Kakiemon kiln, Nangawara, Arita, Saga prefecture, Japan
  • Credit Line

    Gift of anonymous friends of Harold P. Stern
  • Type

    Vessel
  • Restrictions and Rights

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