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  2. Satsuma ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satsuma_ware

    The incredible popularity of Satsuma ware and the eagerness of collectors to find pre-Meiji pieces led some manufacturers and dealers to deliberately misrepresent items' age and origins. Some sold other types of ceramics such as Awata or Seto ware as Satsuma. [51] Some falsely used the names of famous artists or studios to mark pieces. [52]

  3. Yabu Meizan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yabu_Meizan

    His studio produced high-end Satsuma ware, primarily for the export market. That term was originally coined for artistic painted porcelain from the Satsuma Province. Eventually it expanded to include low-quality porcelain that was mass-produced for export, whereas Meizan was one of the artists who continued the tradition of high artistic ...

  4. Makuzu Kōzan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Makuzu_Kōzan

    This was the period at which modern Satsuma ware was distressed for export as antique, and Pollard considers that, up to 1876 at least, there was truth in the allegation of Frank Brinkley that the Makuzu workshop participated in the fraudulent trade. [10] Johannes Justus Rein visited the business in the mid-1870s. [11]

  5. Japanese pottery and porcelain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_pottery_and_porcelain

    Satsuma ware: 薩摩焼: Satsuma Province: Earthenware, originally a local industry of plain vessels started by Korean potters about 1600. From the 19th century a term for a style of highly decorated ware produced in many areas, purely for export to the West. Seto ware: 瀬戸焼: Seto, Aichi: The most produced Japanese pottery in Japan.

  6. Wood One Museum of Art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_One_Museum_of_Art

    Wood One Museum of Art (ウッドワン美術館, Uddo-Wan Bijutsukan) opened in Hatsukaichi, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan in 1996.The collection of some 800 works acquired by the Wood One Company (株式会社ウッドワン) centres around Modern Japanese Painting, Meissen porcelain, Art Nouveau glass, Qing ceramics, and Satsuma ware of the Bakumatsu and Meiji periods, and includes paintings ...

  7. 9 misprints that are worth a ton of money. Do you have a copy?

    www.aol.com/news/2010-05-03-9-misprints-that-are...

    This makes them extraordinarily appealing to collectors, who want to own the very first copies of a work, says Vasilis Terpsopoulos, manager of the rare book department at New York City's Strand ...

  8. Japanese export porcelain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_export_porcelain

    Satsuma ware had begun as decorated earthenware, and was not significantly exported in the early period. But it was shown in Paris, and the local feudal lord had political connections in the West, and it became the most successful export ware, having mostly converted to a porcelain body. [ 27 ]

  9. 6 Christmas Collectibles That Could Be Worth a Fortune

    www.aol.com/6-christmas-collectibles-could-worth...

    Check Out: 8 Rare Coins Worth Thousands That Are Highly Coveted by Coin Collectors. Read Next: 6 Holiday Finds Worth Buying at Aldi. Trending Now: ...

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