Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Yuteki tenmoku glaze meoto yunomi set by Yoshio Endo

In Asian > Japanese Pottery > Show & Tell.
rhineisfine's loves483 of 530Peaches Says Please Don't Sneeze Without Covering Your Face When In Public! Loetz lidded box commissioned by A. Rupp
8
Love it
0
Like it

ho2cultchaho2cultcha loves this.
iggyiggy loves this.
racer4fourracer4four loves this.
rhineisfinerhineisfine loves this.
dav2no1dav2no1 loves this.
PhilDMorrisPhilDMorris loves this.
fortapachefortapache loves this.
vetraio50vetraio50 loves this.
See 6 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 4 years ago

    kwqd
    (1187 items)

    These yunomi by Japanese potter Yoshio Endo are about 3.5" and 3.25" high and 3" in diameter, with hand signed tomobako and indistinctly signed bases. The glaze is a bit unusual as it stops in a rectangle at the base, which is unglazed.

    The substance of the glaze on these is interesting, too, an example of yuteki tenmoku which is how the dotted appearance was obtained. The exterior glaze is a dark plum color transitioning to a clear glaze on the interior which shows off the color of the off white clay and tea when in use. These yunomi are substantial, more like stoneware, which I have been looking for, as most of my recent finds have been porcelain or fine, thin ceramic.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenmoku

    I was told that this meoto yunomi set came from the Nara Prefecture in Japan circa 1993-1994. I found another example of this artist's work, a tenmuko tea bowl in a similar signed tomobako, same glaze same clay. The set in this post was one of several gifts to an artist, a painter, when he first arrived in Japan.

    The whitish clay used may be an indication that Yoshiro Endo worked in the Seto region of Japan known for its white clay. Lack of iron in this clay is responsible for its color. Seto is also known for artists who have revived the use of tenmoku glazes.

    I am finding that vintage, unused meoto yunomi sets are fairly common which makes me suspect that new couples might often receive several sets as wedding presents and that they were also common gifts for other occasions, though this set is not vintage.

    The biography page is missing but I found numerous examples that survive with other examples of his work, including the other one in my collection:

    ceramic history
    Endo
    Yoshio
    799 Maesawa, Mashiko-machi, Haga-gun, Tochigi Prefecture 0285720818
    1944 Born in Hanyu City, Saitama Prefecture
    1974 Enter Mishiro Kiln
    1977 Independence
    1978 Selected for the New Traditional Crafts Exhibition
    1980 Selected for the New Traditional Crafts Exhibition

    I can find nothing made by this artist after 1980, so he may have died around that time.

    Mystery Solved
    logo
    Japanese Pottery
    See all
    Antique Japanese Signed Arita Hand Painted Sometsuke Blue & White Porcelain Vase
    Antique Japanese Signed Arita Hand ...
    $6
    STUNNING PAIR OF ANTIQUE JAPANESE MEIJI PERIOD SATSUMA PORCELAIN VASES
    STUNNING PAIR OF ANTIQUE JAPANESE M...
    $28
    STUNNING PAIR OF ANTIQUE JAPANESE SATSUMA PORCELAIN VASES
    STUNNING PAIR OF ANTIQUE JAPANESE S...
    $31
    STUNNING ANTIQUE JAPANESE SATSUMA PORCELAIN VASE
    STUNNING ANTIQUE JAPANESE SATSUMA P...
    $12
    logo
    Antique Japanese Signed Arita Hand Painted Sometsuke Blue & White Porcelain Vase
    Antique Japanese Signed Arita Hand ...
    $6
    See all

    Comments

    1. kwqd kwqd, 4 years ago
      Thanks for taking a look at my latest meoto yunomi set Thomas, PhilDMorris, Jenni, fortapache and Kevin!
    2. kwqd kwqd, 4 years ago
      Thanks for taking a look dav2no1!
    3. rhineisfine rhineisfine, 4 years ago
      Hi kwqd, I don't know which kiln it is, but I think glaze is a version of yuteki tenmoku (or temmoku) - yuteki means "oilspot" and it can look either finely speckled (as here) or mottled. The other main type of tenmoku glaze is youhen, which is in fine streaks - often described as "haresfoot" in English.

      I have a chawan by the Chinese-Canadian potter Wayne Ngan whose glaze is very similar to the one on your yunomi :)

      P.S. Tenmoku is sometimes used to describe the shape of a certain Japanese teabowl also (a V-shaped bowl with a very small base). This type of teabowl sometimes has tenmoku glaze, but not always :) Tenmoku is named after a place in China and I think the reason the bowl shape has this name, as well as the glaze, is because this shape of teabowl was the one that tea was first made in when the practice of drinking powdered tea first came from China to Japan.
    4. kwqd kwqd, 4 years ago
      Thanks for the information rhineisfine! I appreciate it. I like this set even more, now that I understand the process by which they were glazed.
    5. rhineisfine rhineisfine, 4 years ago
      No problem :) It's a beautiful, subtle finish, one that I think really grows on you. I like that the interior is left unglazed so that you can appreciate the colour of the tea against the white clay. Nice find!
    6. kwqd kwqd, 4 years ago
      Thanks Karen!
    7. kwqd kwqd, 4 years ago
      Thanks iggy!
    8. kwqd kwqd, 4 years ago
      Thanks ho2cultcha!
    9. kwqd kwqd, 3 years ago
      I finally identified this artist as Yoshio Endo b. 1944.

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.