Incense Burner with Flowers and Dots

Cleveland Museum of Art

Incense Burner with Flowers and Dots

Seifū Yohei III

Date
1893–1914
Medium
Porcelain with creamy white translucent glaze and molded and incised design
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 that involved the combination of a distinctive translucent, creamy glaze over an ivory-colored clay body. The silver lid is meant to look like a single flower. The vessel has tapering legs with a combined curvilinear and geometric design; the bands encircling the middle have simple, incised flower motifs alternating with single dots. This cylindrical incense burner has molded decorations on its creamy body.

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