Search results

Start typing

Arita, Hizen province [Japan]

Pair of jars and covers c.1690-1730

Porcelain painted in underglaze blue, coloured overglaze enamels and gold | 63.5 x 26.0 cm (whole object) | RCIN 949

Your share link is...

  Close

  • The three octagonal jars in this garniture are topped by elaborate ornaments in the shape of flower vases. Animal and figurative knobs were common on Japanese export porcelain by the 1680s and became even more ostentatious during the early years of the eighteenth century. The height of the covers also grew more exaggerated at this time, in contrast to earlier low, flat lids which mimicked Chinese forms. This may have been to emphasise their shape and height when displayed en masse in European houses.

    Sprays of peony, wisteria, chrysanthemum and plum blossom appear in fan-shaped panels around the sides of the jars and matching beakers. Fans (ōgi) had been used in Japan since ancient times, and by the Edo period both paintings and lacquerware were produced in forms imitating their shape. These accessories – some so extravagant that they were proscribed by sumptuary law in 1701 – became easily recognisable symbols of Japanese culture in the West, and proved popular motifs on export porcelain.

    Pair of ovoid jars, with short, octagonal neck and projecting foot; the cover, a round dome, with spreading octagonal rim and knob finial in the form of a small hexagonal vase filled with flowering stems. The sides are painted with various fan-shaped panels, containing sprays of peony, wisteria, chrysanthemum and prunus, set in a dark blue ground, decorated with gilt scrollwork, with petal border below. Round the shoulder are pendent swags, tied with tassels and fan-shaped pendants, and on the neck, lotus sprays in panels; the cover decorated to match. Octagonal beakers RCIN 26783.1-2 decorated to match.

    Text adapted from Chinese and Japanese Works of Art in the Collection of Her Majesty The Queen: Volume II and Japan: Courts and Culture (2020)

    Provenance

    Probably acquired by George IV, 1804. Purchased from John Hall on 30 January 1804, Hall was paid for (among others): ‘2 superb Japan Jars & covers & 2 Beakers-- £33.12.-’, ‘3 do. [superb Japan Jars] Octn. do. [covers] 2 do. [Beakers] --£31.1.-’, and ‘3 do.[superb Japan Jars] round do. [covers] 2 do. [Beakers]--£26.5.-’ (Royal Archives GEO/MAIN/26349), which may include these. Perhaps recorded in the Gallery at the Royal Pavilion, Brighton, as ‘A Pair of very fine Octagon shaped Japan Jars and Covers, with Tar [Jar] and embossed flower Knobs, blue and gold flowers and festoons Vandyke bottom borders, twenty two inches [55.9 cm]’ (1829B, p. 45). Noted in the East Gallery, Buckingham Palace, in 1921 (1829B, p. 45). Recorded in the Holyrood 1978 Inventory, p. 9, nos 74–75.

  • Medium and techniques

    Porcelain painted in underglaze blue, coloured overglaze enamels and gold

    Measurements

    63.5 x 26.0 cm (whole object)

  • Place of Production

    Arita [Saga, Japan]


The income from your ticket contributes directly to The Royal Collection Trust, a registered charity. The aims of The Royal Collection Trust are the care and conservation of the Royal Collection, and the promotion of access and enjoyment through exhibitions, publications, loans and educational activities.