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*''Japanese'': 薩摩焼 ''(Satsuma yaki)''
*''Japanese'': 薩摩焼 ''(Satsuma yaki)''
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Satsuma wares refers to two unrelated types of pottery. Early Satsuma wares, produced up through the 18th century chiefly for use in [[tea ceremony]], were simple, cream-colored ceramics with a pale, finely-crackled yellow glaze. Beginning in the [[Meiji period]], however, the term came to refer to a style of works lavishly decorated in gold and polychrome overglazes, with exceptionally detailed multi-color images of figures or scenes. While the earlier type were chiefly produced in [[Satsuma province]], the latter type are produced in [[Kyoto]], [[Osaka]], and elsewhere, in addition to being produced in Satsuma.
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Satsuma wares refers to two unrelated types of pottery.
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Early Satsuma wares, produced up through the 18th century chiefly for use in [[tea ceremony]], were simple, cream-colored ceramics with a pale, finely-crackled yellow glaze. These, like many other [[Edo period]] forms of Japanese pottery, were first developed by Korean potters forcibly brought to Japan as captives during [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi|Toyotomi Hideyoshi's]] [[Korean Invasions|invasions of Korea]] in the 1590s.
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Beginning in the [[Bakumatsu period]], [[Shimazu Nariakira]] promoted the development of a new form of Satsuma wares, explicitly for foreign markets. He oversaw the opening of a set of kilns at Iso (in [[Kagoshima]] city) in [[1855]], and encouraged potters to develop a style of [[export art]] pottery that would appeal to Western buyers.<ref>The same Iso kilns were used to produce fireproof bricks for use in Iso's reverberatory furnaces.</ref> Thus the term "Satsuma wares" came to refer to a new style of works lavishly decorated in gold and polychrome overglazes, with exceptionally detailed multi-color images of figures or scenes. After a number of these works were displayed at Satsuma's pavilion at the [[1867 Paris World's Fair]], Satsuma wares became all the more popular among Western buyers, and eventually came to be produced not only in [[Kagoshima prefecture]], but also in [[Kyoto]], [[Osaka]], [[Yokohama]], and [[Tokyo]] as well, though they continued to be called "Satsuma" wares.
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==References==
==References==
*Gallery labels, Santa Barbara Museum of Art.
*Gallery labels, Santa Barbara Museum of Art.
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*"[http://www.shuseikan.jp/word/factory11.html Satsuma-yaki]," ''Satsuma Shimazu-ke no rekishi'', [[Shokoshuseikan|Shôkoshûseikan]] official website.
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<references/>
[[Category:Edo Period]]
[[Category:Edo Period]]
[[Category:Meiji Period]]
[[Category:Meiji Period]]
[[Category:Art and Architecture]]
[[Category:Art and Architecture]]