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Japanese Ceramic Kogo in the Form of Oshidori Duck browse these categories for related items... All Items: Archives:Regional Art:Asian:Japanese: Pre 1900: item # 866897 Please refer to our stock # 2-843 when inquiring.
B & C Antiques P. O. Box 291 Derby, CT 06418 203-929-7312 Guest Book SOLD |
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This overglazed covered ceramic incense storage container (“kogo”) was modeled in the shape of a male mandarin duck (“oshidori”) with high arched wing feathers painted with a rich aubergine glaze. Meiji period (1869-1912). The duck’s body, which forms the kogo’s cover, is glazed a deep rich purple color, as is the outside of the bottom section. The interior is washed in a finely crackled buff colored glaze, and the rims are unglazed. Mandarin ducks are primarily symbols of conjugal happiness and fidelity. Pairs of mandarin ducks mate and stay together for life -- when one dies, the other refuses food, pining away until it also dies. Incense (“ko”) played an important role in the tea ceremony, which provided a setting for the admiration of the utensils associated with it. Among the most charming of these were the kogo, small covered containers used to store aromatic wood chips which were burned at certain points during the formal tea ceremony. They were also sometimes set out as display objects within special waiting rooms where guests could relax before the ceremony began or during scheduled interludes. Exhibiting a great deal of imagination, careful observation of nature and a playful sense of humor, kogo naturally came to be enjoyed outside their role as objects to be used and admired in the tea ceremony. They were exchanged as gifts and treasured for their own sake, and their popularity gave rise to a seemingly endless variety of shapes and decorative styles. The potters who made kogo took pride in creating highly original and often intricate forms. Many of the boxes have ornamental surface decorations, and others are treated as miniature sculptures. The production of kogo was at its peak during the first half of the 19th century. The most extensive collection of antique Japanese ceramic kogo – more than three thousand -- can be found in The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. (See “Japanese Incense Boxes Rediscovered: The Georges Clemenceau Kogo Collection of the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts.”) CONDITION is excellent. DIMENSIONS: 2 ½” (6.4 cm) long, 1 ¾” (4.5 cm) wide, 2” (5 cm) high. |
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