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JAPANESE SEALS AND MARKING - BASIC RULES
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| The production of Kutani ceramics can be separated into several periods : |
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1) End of Edo period (up to 1868) The potters and painters mainly marked their ceramics with a - 福 - Fuku mark. Therefore it is difficult to identify the kiln just from the mark. There are some exception like Ono, Minsan, Kasugayama kilns... where specific marking has some times been used. But be careful this fuku mark has been copied so many times up to now. |
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2)
Meiji period 1868 - 1912
It
is may be more easy to understand the marking made during this period
as many information are generally written on the pot. There is always
at the minimum the Kutani mark - 九谷
- . This mark is often combined with -大日本 - Dai
Nippon (Great Japan) or with - 日本 - Nihon (Japan). The
mark Kaga no Kuni - 加賀国 The
name Kayo - 加陽 In
addition we can also get either the name of the kiln or the name of the
shop which has commercialized the production or in rather rare cases the
name of the painter who did the actual work. There are exceptional
cases where you get the name of the kiln and the name of the painter.
On the other hand there has been so many kilns producing Kutani wares
from that period that it is difficult to identify every kiln, shop or
painter. There are several terms used to identify the different manufacturing places - 窯 - Kama (kiln) , - 書店- Shoten (shop) or - 堂 - (Do) trading firm. Then finally whether it is a potter name, a kiln or a shop name it is generally followed by the expression - 製 - Sei or - 造 - Zo (made by), sometimes both - 製造 - Sei Zo and more scarcely by - 画 - Ga (painted) or - 筆 - Hitsu (drawn by). There is a difference between "made" and "painted or drawn by", the former being understood that "made" includes the manufacturing of the pot itself when the later "painted by" means that the artist bought the pot from a nearby kiln which generally was doing only white pots and therefore did only the paint job. Japanese kanji are written from left to right (European way) since Meiji period. They were written from right to left before. But there is no exact rules. In addition kanji can always be written from top to bottom. Horizontal and vertical writing can be used simultaneously. |
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2) Taisho period 1913 - 1926 Marking is getting more simple, however we almost always get also at the minimum the Kutani mark - 九谷 -. This mark is often combined with -大日本 - Dai Nippon (Great Japan) or with - 日本 - Nihon (Japan).
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3) Beginning of Showa up to W.W.II Ceramics are also always identified with a Kutani mark - 九谷 - . The mark is also often combined with - 日本 - Nihon (Japan). |
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4) Modern Kutani There are mainly 2 cases:
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