Chinese Ceramics & Antiques Discussion

Antique Chinese Ceramics => Antique Japanese & Korean Ceramics => Topic started by: bokaba on Jul 24, 2017, 15:18:27

Title: Japanese (?) Blue/White Bowl
Post by: bokaba on Jul 24, 2017, 15:18:27
I was wondering if this is a Japanese, possibly Arita bowl. It looks 19th Century to me, but I am not even sure if it is Japanese. Please move to the Chinese board if Chinese.

Thank you

Bokaba
Title: Re: Japanese (?) Blue/White Bowl
Post by: peterp on Jul 24, 2017, 15:38:38
This has a typical Japanese bottom. The decoration is copying a Chinese design.
Title: Re: Japanese (?) Blue/White Bowl
Post by: bokaba on Jul 25, 2017, 02:16:21
Stan do you think this bowl is Meiji Period?

Bokaba
Title: Re: Japanese (?) Blue/White Bowl
Post by: Stan on Jul 25, 2017, 10:26:13
Hi Bokaba, I'v never seen a mark like this, is that a 10 in the mark?
Title: Re: Japanese (?) Blue/White Bowl
Post by: Stan on Jul 25, 2017, 10:45:32
I can't really see the bottom clearly, it looks like there are two lines, one on the inside of the foot rim and one outside the foot rim usually on arita there would be 3 to 4 lines, so possibly Seto ware, I have seen 1 to 2 ring on seto, it looks even, not out of round like older Japanese porcelain, it looks like it could be Meiji to me.
Title: Re: Japanese (?) Blue/White Bowl
Post by: peterp on Jul 25, 2017, 10:56:57
>is that a 10 in the mark?
No, it looks as if it was a stylized/simplified Kanji mark (aka Chinese character mark). It could be another of those marks that the Japanese copied from Chinese porcelain. The decoration is the lingzhi fungus pattern that was made during much of the Qing dynasty.
Title: Re: Japanese (?) Blue/White Bowl
Post by: bokaba on Jul 25, 2017, 11:12:31
Hi Stan and Peter,

Here is a closer picture of the mark. It is hard to see since there is a spur mark in it.

Bokaba
Title: Re: Japanese (?) Blue/White Bowl
Post by: peterp on Jul 25, 2017, 11:21:21
Difficult. This is not a matter of being able to read, it is a matter of knowing the mark; the stylized mark characters are too different from normal writing to recognize them.