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Ogata Kenzan

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Name
  
Ogata Kenzan

Siblings
  
Ogata Korin

Died
  
1743, Edo

Ogata Kenzan Small tea bowl with design of landscape and poem 18th
Similar People
  
Ogata Korin, Tawaraya Sotatsu, Sakai Hoitsu, Bernard Leach

Ogata kenzan s pottery


Ogata Kenzan (尾形 乾山, 1663–1743), originally Ogata Shinsei (尾形 深省), and also known by the pseudonym Shisui, was a Japanese potter and painter.

Contents

Ogata Kenzan Small tea bowl with design of landscape and poem 18th

Biography

Ogata Kenzan Ogata Kenzan Butler Pottery

He was born in Kyoto in a rich merchant family. His older brother was Ogata Korin. He learned from the famous potter Nonomura Ninnsei and made his own kiln. In 1712 a nobleman began patronizing his kiln, he moved to the east area of Kyoto. He was one of the greatest ceramicists of the Tokugawa era. In 1713, he moved to Edo where he also spend the rest of his life.

Ogata Kenzan Ogata Kenzan Works on Sale at Auction amp Biography Invaluable

Ogata Kenzan produced a distinctive style of freely brushed grasses, blossoms, and birds as decorative motifs for pottery. His pieces were noted for their perfect relation between design and shape. He often collaborated on the decoration of pottery with his older brother, Ogata Korin (1658–1716), after whom the style known as Rimpa (Korin + pa meaning “school”) was named.

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Bernard Leach, the famous studio potter, wrote a book about Ogata Kenzan in 1966 entitled Kenzan and his Tradition, published by Faber & Faber in London.

References

Ogata Kenzan Wikipedia