
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Bowl with Ships and Dutchmen
Japan
- Date
- 18th century
- Medium
- Arita ware, Imari type, porcelain with overglaze enamels
- Department
- Asian Art
- Institution
- Minneapolis Institute of Art
The technique used to decorate this bowl is known as iro-e (colored pictures). Motifs and patterns are painted with colored glazes onto previously glazed and fired ceramics, which are then fired again at a lower temperature so the color melts onto the underglaze. The Chinese developed this method in the 1100s, and it was introduced to Japan about five hundred years later. This bowl’s design juxtaposes Japanese and decidedly non-Japanese motifs. A European ship and sailors at the center are encircled by a blue border with traditional Buddhist motifs of flying dragons, wish-granting jewels, and golden clouds. Surrounding this are more ships and pairs of curly-haired, colorfully clothed Dutchmen. Asia
The authoritative record is held by Minneapolis Institute of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Minneapolis Institute of Art and other institutions.

Bowl
Getty Museum

Bowl
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Bowl on Stand
Getty Museum

Teabowls with Peony and Crabapple
Cleveland Museum of Art

Bowl with Dutch and Chinese Figures
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Teabowl from Teabowls with Peony and Crabapple
Cleveland Museum of Art

Teabowl from Teabowls with Peony and Crabapple
Cleveland Museum of Art

Teabowl from Teabowls with Peony and Crabapple
Cleveland Museum of Art

Teabowl from Teabowls with Peony and Crabapple
Cleveland Museum of Art

Teabowl from Teabowls with Peony and Crabapple
Cleveland Museum of Art
Bowl with Daoist Immortals
Art Institute of Chicago

Bowl with Chinese Landscape
Cleveland Museum of Art