Vase

Manufacturer Rookwood Pottery Company American
Decorator Kataro Shirayamadani American, born Japan
1900
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 707
The Rookwood Pottery, founded by Maria Longworth Nichols in 1880, became one of the most significant and longest surviving of all American art potteries, remaining in operation until well after World War II. During Rookwood’s early years, Nichols made significant contributions to work in the barbotine manner, a technique of using pigmented slip applied in a painterly fashion under a clear glaze. In 1887 Kataro Shirayamadani, a Japanese porcelain painter, was hired to broaden the pottery’s offerings of work in the Japanesque style. While a talented artist, Shirayamadani had no previous experience in underglaze painting, but quickly became one of the pottery’s most accomplished decorators in this technique.

The quality and execution of this applied decoration is superb, and it is among the most successful designs in Rookwood Pottery’s Black Iris glaze line. The individual stalks of pampas grass in a bright sage green stand in contrast to the luminous black background. The dramatic design was conceived and executed by Shirayamadani, who was hired to broaden the pottery’s offerings of work in the Japanesque style.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Vase
  • Manufacturer: Rookwood Pottery Company (American, Cincinnati, Ohio 1880–1967)
  • Decorator: Kataro Shirayamadani (American (born Japan), Tokyo 1865–1948 Cleveland, Ohio)
  • Date: 1900
  • Geography: Made in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
  • Culture: American
  • Medium: Earthenware with glaze
  • Dimensions: H: 9 ¼ in
  • Credit Line: Gift of Helen Birenbaum, 2017
  • Object Number: 2017.445.1
  • Curatorial Department: The American Wing

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