Shaving Bowl thumbnail 1
Shaving Bowl thumbnail 2
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Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Japan, Room 45, The Toshiba Gallery

Shaving Bowl

1700-1725 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This shaving bowl is an example of the type of porcelain made in early 18th-century Japan for export to Europe. The areas of dark blue were achieved by painting with cobalt oxide under a clear glaze and firing to a high temperature in a reducing atmosphere - one in which the kiln is starved of oxygen so that the burning fuel draws chemically bonded oxygen from the reactive parts of the ceramic material, leaving them in a reduced state and changing their colour. The gold, red and other enamel colours were applied and fused on in subsequent, low-temperature firings. The distinctive so-called Imari-style colour scheme was much copied by 18th-century European manufacturers. The term Imari comes from the name of the port in western Japan through which this and other products of the nearby Arita kilns were shipped. Porcelains for export were sent to Nagasaki and then shipped abroad by Chinese and Dutch merchants, the Dutch, who were based on the island of Dejima, being the only Europeans permitted to conduct trade in Japan at this time.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Porcelain decorated in underglaze blue, overglaze enamels and gilt
Brief description
Shaving Bowl, porcelain with decoration in underglaze blue, overglaze enamels and gilt; Japan, Arita kilns (Imari type), Edo period, 1700-1725
Physical description
Decoration: Bridge with banana plant, prunus and chrysanthemums.
Dimensions
  • Diameter: 30.9cm
Styles
Gallery label
  • Shaving bowl 1690–1720 This shaving bowl in a European shape is painted in a combination of underglaze blue, overglaze enamels and gold. This is characteristic of what are known as Imari wares. Imari is the name of the port near Arita from where porcelain was sent to Nagasaki for shipping abroad by Chinese and Dutch merchants. Arita kilns Porcelain painted in underglaze blue, overglaze enamels and gold (Imari type) Turner Bequest Museum no. FE.33-1973 (04/11/2015)
  • Shaving Bowl Porcelain with decoration in underglaze blue, overglaze enamels and gilt Bridge with banana plant, prunus and chrysanthemums Arita kilns About 1700-1725 Turner Bequest(1986)
Credit line
Bequeathed by S.R. Turner
Subjects depicted
Summary
This shaving bowl is an example of the type of porcelain made in early 18th-century Japan for export to Europe. The areas of dark blue were achieved by painting with cobalt oxide under a clear glaze and firing to a high temperature in a reducing atmosphere - one in which the kiln is starved of oxygen so that the burning fuel draws chemically bonded oxygen from the reactive parts of the ceramic material, leaving them in a reduced state and changing their colour. The gold, red and other enamel colours were applied and fused on in subsequent, low-temperature firings. The distinctive so-called Imari-style colour scheme was much copied by 18th-century European manufacturers. The term Imari comes from the name of the port in western Japan through which this and other products of the nearby Arita kilns were shipped. Porcelains for export were sent to Nagasaki and then shipped abroad by Chinese and Dutch merchants, the Dutch, who were based on the island of Dejima, being the only Europeans permitted to conduct trade in Japan at this time.
Collection
Accession number
FE.33-1973

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Record createdFebruary 18, 2009
Record URL
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