Tuesday 4 August 2009

'Pic' of the tea

The most important ladies and young girls on my blog! These ladies picking the tea that we all enjoy so very much. Arigato gozaimasu!

A pretty tinted postcard c. 1930 with that refreshing cup of tea....

The postcard reads "As these maids of Japan sip their nice cup of tea,
May you drink deep of happiness, pleasure and glee"


Hot water for tea...


A warm welcome to the tea house...

Cha ceramics

Tea bowl Shino type Mino ware.
Known as "Furisode"
Momoyama period 1600

Five serving dishes with persimmon design.
Momoyama period 1600-1620
Mino ware {green Oribe type} Motoyashiki kiln.




Seto ware mizusashi (water jar)
Probably from ōfuke, Japan Edo period, 17th century AD
This fresh water container has spiralling fronds painted under the white glaze much in the Ezetō ('Illustrated Seto') style. Such wares were made in the Mino kilns working in the Seto tradition, and also at nearby ōfuke (near modern Nagoya) where this piece was probably made.
Among the major kiln groups established by the Kamakura period (1185-1333), only those at Seto developed the deliberately applied glaze instead of the old natural ash glaze. Early pieces imitated wares from the Chinese Song dynasty (AD 960-1279). The rich Seto glaze was perfected during the fifteenth century, and later adopted by potters of Mino Province (modern Gifu Prefecture).
~..~
The development of Japanese ceramics flourished from the late Muromachi through to the beginning of the Edo period {16th-17th century}. Much of the new activity had to do with the rise of the tea ceremony {chanoyu}, which had been introduced from China in 1191 by the Zen priest Eisai {1141-1215}. In the course of time, the wealthy citizens of Kyoto and other large towns,as well as the samurai, had come to accept the tea ceremony and its basic tenents as their way of life. As the tea ceremony came to occupy a place of intense importance, a demand arose for appropriate ceramics to be used in the rituals.
Karatsu was a simple peasant ware which was adapted to the tea ceremony originally. Shino and Oribe ware, were, from the beginning intended for use in chanoyo and the accompanying kaiseki-ryori {before the tea ceremony food service}. It has traditionally been suggested that the noted tea master Furuta Oribe {1544-1615} played a major role in the designs of Shino. This cannot be proven,and it may be that he only placed orders at the Shino kilns, which were operating under the protection of the powerful Toki clan, of which he was a descendant.
The Toki family was in control of eastern Mino.To this area, some fifteen miles north of Seto, many Seto potters had migrated toward the end of the Muromachi period, when it had become increasingly difficult for them to continue their work in Owari province owing to the unsettled conditions caused by the civil wars that were raging then. As a result, of the movement of potters away from Seto, new kilns were set up in eastern Mino, leading to the production of new wares - Ki {yellow}, Seto, Shino, Seto-guro {Black Seto}, and Oribe - which flourished in the Momoyama period.

Kiku - the chrysanthemum











Woodblock print by Ando Hiroshige with Kabuki actors and kiku background

Monday 3 August 2009

Welcome to a small tea house

Hopefully there will be lots of unusual and interesting ronin, geisha, rogues, artisan craft people, wandering Yamabushi, even yokai and children passing by this little tea shop. They will all have a story to tell - some may be a legend, another a ghost story and maybe another will recite a haiku for us.....?