Japanese Kutani Shell Shape Dish, circa 1880
Current Bid: | £20.00 |
Bid Increment: | £2.00 |
Next Min Bid: | £22.00 |
Buyer’s Premium: | £4.80 |
Total Amount: | £24.80 |
Number of Bids: | 3 |
Location: | United Kingdom |
Highest Bidder: | User 1360 |
Auction Start: | 21/10/24 15:30:00 UTC |
Auction Ending: | 05/11/24 20:20:00 UTC |
Time Remaining: | 2d 1h 39m |
Japanese Kutani Shell Shape Dish, circa 1880
A Japanese Kutani dish in the form of a shell with typical modelled ribbing to the front and finely decorated in iron red, sepia, grisaille and gold with three shell shape panels filled with birds and flowers (peony and chrysanthemum) on an iron red ground with stylised gilt foliage with, in addition, roundel and part roundel shape panels with gilt floral patterns, the reverse plain and with a two character mark 'Ku' 'Tani' to the centre.Kutani (the word means 'nine valleys') porcelain was made at various factories in the former Kaga province of Japan. The earliest pieces were in a completely different style employing a palette of colours emphasising green, the so called 'Ko Kutani'. Production of this ceased around 1730, and manufacturing was not revived until the early nineteenth century when the more familiar colourings of iron red and gold were introduced. Many pieces were exported to the West in a variety of forms including vases and wall plates. This shell dish is more unusual; the shape is more normally found in Chinese ceramics. Perhaps one of an original pair, this dish, like its Chinese counterparts, was probably intended as a serving dish and could even be used as such today although it can well stand as a decorative item.
Size: | Width 8.7cm, Depth 8cm, Ht 4cm |
Weight: | 350gm |
Date: | 1880 |
Condition: | Very good condition |
Estimate: | £30 – 50 |