Bizen ware

Bizen ware

nihongo|Bizen ware|備前焼|Bizen-yaki is a type of Japanese pottery most identifiable by its ironlike hardness, reddish brown color, absence of glaze, and markings resulting from wood-burning kiln firing.

Bizen is named after the village of Imbe in Okayama prefecture, formerly known as Bizen province. This artwork is Japan's oldest pottery making technique, introduced in the Heian period. Bizen is one of the six remaining kilns of medieval Japan.

Bizen clay bodies have a high iron content, and traditionally, much organic matter that is unreceptive to glazing. The clay can take many forms.

The surface treatments of Bizen wares are entirely dependent on yohen, or "kiln accidents." Pine ash produces goma, or 'sesame seed' glaze spotting. Rice straw wrapped around pieces creates red and brown scorch marks. The placement of pieces in a kiln causes them to be fired under different conditions, with a variety of different results. Considering that one clay body and type of firing is used, the variety of results is remarkable.

Because of the clay composition, Bizen wares are fired slowly over a long period of time. Firings take place only one or two times a year.

References

* Wilson, Richard L. "Inside Japanese Ceramics". Weatherhill, New York and Tokyo, Second Edition 2005. ISBN 0-8348-0442-5

External links

* e-yakimono.net [http://www.e-yakimono.net/]
* Handbook for the Appreciation of Japanese Traditional Crafts [http://www.nihon-kogeikai.com/TEBIKI-E.html]
* Bizen Gallery Aoyama [http://www.bizenpottery.com/bizen-eshopping.html] in English and Japanese


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Bizen ware — ▪ pottery also called  Imbe Ware,         pottery manufactured at and near Imbe, Okayama ken (prefecture), on the Inland Sea of Japan, from at least the 6th century AD, in what was once Bizen province. Bizen ware has a dark gray stoneware body… …   Universalium

  • bizen ware — bēˈzen noun Usage: usually capitalized B Etymology: part translation of Japanese bizen yaki, from Bizen, former province in Japan, where it was made + Japanese yaki pottery : a Japanese ceramic ware produced since the 14th century that is… …   Useful english dictionary

  • Bizen Museums — Bizen, in Okayama Prefecture, hosts two kiln site museums devoted to the display of ceramics. Bizen is the site of internationally renowned Bizen ware, unglazed stoneware that has existed from at least the Kamakura period (1185 ndash;1333) to the …   Wikipedia

  • Shigaraki ware — History As a traditional legend, a potter by the name of Kato Shirozaemon Kagemasa, also known as Toshiro, had supposedly gone to China with a Buddhist priest Dogen during the Joo era. Upon his return to Japan around 1227, he wandered through… …   Wikipedia

  • Raku ware — A 16th century black Raku style chawan, used for thick tea (Tokyo National Museum) File:Tea bowl with designs of pine boughs and interlocking circles, unknown raku ware workshop, Kyoto, 18th 19th Cent, Freer Gallery of Art.jpg Tea bowl with… …   Wikipedia

  • Oribe ware — Oribe Dish with Lid Oribe ware (織部焼, Oribe yaki?) is a type of Japanese pottery most identifiabl …   Wikipedia

  • Ōtani ware — (大谷焼, Ōtani yaki?) is type of Japanese pottery most famously known for its large size. Ōtani is made in the part of Naruto, Tokushima known as Ōtani. The potter s wheel used in the production of Ōtani pottery is known as a nerokuro, literally a… …   Wikipedia

  • pottery — /pot euh ree/, n., pl. potteries. 1. ceramic ware, esp. earthenware and stoneware. 2. the art or business of a potter; ceramics. 3. a place where earthen pots or vessels are made. [1475 85; POTTER1 + Y3] * * * I One of the oldest and most… …   Universalium

  • Chaki — Example of a lacquerware natsume. Chaki (茶器) is a Japanese term that literally means tea implement. In the vocabulary of Japanese tea ceremony, it broadly means (1) any implement used in the practice of chanoyu, and more narrowly means (2) the… …   Wikipedia

  • List of Japanese tea ceremony equipment — Some implements for tea ceremony. From bottom left: chashaku (tea scoop), sensu (fan), chasen kusenaoshi (whisk shaper), chasen (bamboo whisk) and fukusa (purple silk cloth) This is a list of articles used in Japanese tea ceremony. Please add… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”