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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Edmund de Waal, Lidded jar, 1993–2000 c.
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Edmund de Waal, Lidded jar, 1993–2000 c.

Edmund de Waal

Lidded jar, 1993–2000 c.
Porcelain, celadon glaze and oxides impressed with seal
Height 18 cm | 7 1/8 in
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This vessel was thrown on a pottery wheel and belong to the studio pottery tradition. As with all Edmund de Waal’s mature work, it is made from Limoges porcelain. In...
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This vessel was thrown on a pottery wheel and belong to the studio pottery tradition. As with all Edmund de Waal’s mature work, it is made from Limoges porcelain. In 1993, de Waal returned to London from Japan following a two-year scholarship with the Daiwa Anglo-Japanese Foundation during which he worked at the Mejiro Ceramics Studio in Tokyo. He took a studio in South London and began to make porcelain vessels that were informed by his studies in Japan. His use of pale celadon glazes—a variety of ineffable hues in blue and green—was partly suggested by medieval Korean ceramics, which are highly prized in Japan. This jar was impressed with an antique Chinese or Japanese seal, a collection of which de Waal still keeps in his studio. Fresh from the potter’s wheel while the clay was wet, the jar was pressed inwards to create its distinctive uneven shape. De Waal referred to his wares of this period as kitchen porcelain. In 1996, he explained that his ceramics were neither wholly decorative nor wholly practical. ‘This is porcelain that can be lived with and handled; kitchen porcelain.’ This vessel was made at a period in which de Waal’s reputation began to grow exponentially. At the start of the nineties he was exhibiting exclusively and infrequently in England. By the end of the decade his work was being shown by galleries in London, New York and several European cities, as well as in museum exhibitions such as The New White: Contemporary Studio Porcelain held at the Victoria & Albert Museum in 1999.
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Provenance

Private Collection
Piano Nobile, London

Literature

The authenticity of this work has been confirmed by Edmund de Waal.
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