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Each piece is carefully packed for international delivery.
This small jar is a piece of Delftware from the 17th to 18th centuries. The rich, yogurt-like white hue, achieved by adding tin to the transparent glaze, served as a foundation for the development of underglaze painting and colored decoration. The low-fired clay of Delft is fragile, and over time, it tends to crumble and flake. The plain white Delft exhibits a presence akin to a canvas that bears the marks of time.
This particular item was crafted as a container for herbs and spices, featuring a slightly thinner glaze and a gently constricted body. The surface is dotted with signs of firing and glaze loss, embodying the unique, soft shadows that only age can impart. Inside, stains from the passage of time spread across its interior, enveloping the piece in a quiet atmosphere imbued with a sense of subtle melancholy.
While it was used in Europe as a container for ointments, in Japan, it has been cherished since the Edo period as a sake cup or lid stand within the tea ceremony, valued for its aesthetic. Its lack of a specific function allows it to quietly invite the imagination.
During a one-hour water leakage test, no leaks were observed; however, due to its age, long-term use cannot be guaranteed.
Numerous product photos are available for you to examine the details and condition. Should you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.
I too was drawn to this striking white and to the appeal of authentic old ceramics, and it led me to travel through Europe in search of antique pottery. Before I knew it, more than three hundred pieces of White Delft had come into my care. Some had lain buried in the earth; others had been carefully passed down through generations. In this way they survived several centuries to reach us today. Yet few remain, and in recent years White Delft has been reassessed in Europe, making it unfortunately far from easy to collect.
After visiting local collectors, excavators, their friends and acquaintances, I would finally find these delicate, timeworn pieces of White Delft and carry them back to my lodging. Placed on a table by the window, they brought a strange calm, as though I were sitting in zazen. The shifting Dutch sunlight casts shadows across their surfaces; within the stillness lies open space. No two whites wear the same expression. Like canvases reflecting time itself, they continually preserve, with vivid clarity, the essence of old pottery.
This distinctive white was born from a transparent lead-glass glaze, common in medieval Europe from the thirteenth to fifteenth centuries, made opaque and white by the addition of tin oxide, a material used in Islamic ceramics. The greatest characteristic of this technique—commonly called tin glaze or tin-enamel glaze—is that it turns the color of the earthenware body into a white ground suitable for decoration.
Previously, coloring pottery required consideration of both “the color of the clay” and “the color of the glaze.” If the underlying clay was dark, the color of the finished glazed vessel also became dark, which was said to be a persistent problem for workshops seeking consistent quality. Once a ground of tin glaze was applied, however, bright colors could appear vividly, while darker colors could form designs with clear contrasts of light and shade. As the foundation for the brilliant painting and decoration seen in the majolica traditions developed in Spain and Italy, this method revolutionized European ceramics. Pottery made by this technique is called faience in France and Delftware in the Netherlands.
In Japan, by contrast, tin glaze was relatively unfamiliar. Whites were made with silica-based glazes using rice-husk ash or straw ash. When we compare the whites of ceramics, the histories and climates woven by each place emerge within the color: the white of the Song dynasty, the white of Joseon, the white of early Imari, and the white of Delft. Each holds a different story. Is it because I am Japanese that I am drawn to white and feel compelled to read something from its empty space?
In fact, White Delft has long had ties with Japan. Trade between Japan and the Dutch East India Company began after the Dutch trading post was established in Hirado in 1609. Old Imari and other Japanese ceramics remain in Europe, while ceramics from other parts of Asia and from the Netherlands reached Japan. Among these early imported wares, Delft was known as kōmō-de and especially prized by tea practitioners. It is said that pieces were imaginatively repurposed as tea utensils such as tea bowls and kensui waste-water vessels. Ogata Kenzan also made copies, and the ware appears to have enjoyed a quiet fashion, chiefly in the world of chanoyu.
At tea gatherings I host through ROCANIIRU, I sometimes fit a lid to a piece of White Delft and use it as a tea caddy (chaire). Such play makes me wonder what the tea practitioners of the time thought when they first encountered White Delft and saw a ware so full of foreign character. Surely they imagined, “this could become that,” or “that could become this,” their hearts stirred by the open space containing so many possibilities.
Although each takes its own form, the pieces share certain broad types, including shallow dishes and albarello jars. Their outlines may be uneven from side to side, and wave-like undulations may appear around the rims; they possess a warm presence in which one senses the maker’s breath. They may generally be described as anonymous ceramics. Their frequent appearance in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Netherlandish paintings, including those of Bruegel, suggests how closely they belonged to everyday life.
The universal beauty held by such anonymous crafts of daily life may pose an intriguing question for contemporary craft. The beauty dwelling in an unnamed vessel: what do we find in a “white” marked by daily life? White Delft seems still to ask us, quietly.
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Tax excluded. Import duties may apply. Shipping costs are calculated at checkout.
