Stunning Traditional Japanese Imari hand decorated porcelain baluster form glazed porcelain Vase of good-sized proportions, now converted to an electric Table Lamp, complete with later plain heavy-duty Ormolu circular mount and ebonized wooden stepped base. Third quarter of the Nineteenth Century.
The main outer glazed porcelain body with plain surface detail, beautifully hand decorated with all over typical decorative Imari palette in colours of iron red and cobalt blue tones on an off-white ground, beautifully mounted with an ormolu mount
Height: (entire overall as shown in image one) 17” (43cm). Width: (at wooden base) 6.25" (15.5cm). Depth: (at wooden base) 6.25” (15.5cm).
Condition: Superb condition with no losses. The ormolu mount and base have been re-gold plated, no losses to porcelain. This Lamp has been re-wired for electricity. Back and front views are similar.
Location: Dublin City, Ireland.
Affordable fixed charger Worldwide Store to door shipping.
Imari Ware first began arriving from Japan to Europe in the late 17th century. The elegant porcelain thrilled royals and nobles, and was not only used as high-end crockery but also displayed as status symbols in royal palaces. The mountain village of Okawachiyama and its secret kilns is the best place to explore the history of Imari ware.
The origins of Japan’s prized Imari ware can be traced back four centuries to Kyushu, when a potter discovered the white kaolin clay essential to producing porcelain in the town of Arita. Arita potters were soon making porcelain and shipping it from nearby Imari Port to other parts of Japan. Despite the source, their products became known as Imari ware—or Imari for short—and porcelain from the Edo period (1603-1867) is collectively referred to as Old Imari ware.
Today Japanese Imari Antique Porcelain items remain as popular as ever throughout Europe, America and Canada.