
Cleveland Museum of Art
Incense Burner
Seifū Yohei III
- Date
- 1893–1914
- Medium
- Porcelain with creamy white glaze and molded design and floral openwork silver lid
- Culture
- Japan, Meiji period (1868–1912)
- Department
- Japanese Art
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Yohei III made incense burners in a wide variety of designs and styles. The body and glaze of this one are taihakuji , or “great white porcelain,” an important early invention Yohei III devised in 1872. The burner has rounded, cabriole legs, resembling tiny table legs, attached to the exterior and the faintest decorative band around the bottom. Lids were produced outside the studio by metalwork specialists. For this incense burner, they created a floral-patterned silver lid. This cylindrical incense burner has a distinctive translucent, creamy glaze over an ivory-colored clay body.
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