Antique Japanese Arita Imari Porcelain Dish Plum Bamboo Pine
Fuki-Choshun 富貴長春
![Picture](/uploads/1/3/2/7/132721643/published/pxl-20240704-221928776-fotor-bg-remover-20240704175518.png?1720140972)
For sale:
www.ebay.com/sch/xcoasterxtreme/m.html?_nkw=&_armrs=1&_ipg=&_from=&rt=nc&LH_Auction=1
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Type: Small Plate Dish
Material: Porcelain
Age: Meiji Period (1868-1912)
Origin/Maker: Arita Imari ware, Arita, Japan. Fuki-Choshun (富貴長春) maker's mark on base. Meaning Wealth, Nobility, Longevity and Youth, also translated as "Good fortune and long life" or "Wealth and Everlasting Spring". Alternative translations add that fuki (huki) also means peonies and is a symbol of wealth and choshun means roses, a symbol of everlasting spring as in, forever young. This mark was mainly used during the Meiji Period, from 1868-1912. During this period, Japan moved from being an isolated society to one with more open trade, where this one of the earliest trade marks not imitating a Chinese Imperial Nian Hao (reign mark).
www.gotheborg.com/marks/20thcenturyjapan.shtml
Size: 4 1/2" diameter (11.43 cm)
Weight: 4.6 oz (129 g)
Provenance:
Present: Ryan Snooks collection of Japanese & Asian Decorative Art
Previous: Private Collection
Collected: Santa Barbara CA antique store 2024
Condition: Item is used in good condition commensurate with age, see photos. No cracks or chips. Some light surface wear and scratches.
Subject: Imari dish with painted red, green, gold, orange, and underglaze blue and white (sometsuke) designs of Three Friends of Winter (Sho Chiku Bai), of Bamboo, Pine, & Plum in center and around outside, together with tako karakusa arabesque vine designs, and other flowers.
Location:
Antique Japanese Arita Imari Porcelain Dish Plum Bamboo Pine Fuki-Choshun 富貴長春
www.ebay.com/sch/xcoasterxtreme/m.html?_nkw=&_armrs=1&_ipg=&_from=&rt=nc&LH_Auction=1
See also:
Type: Small Plate Dish
Material: Porcelain
Age: Meiji Period (1868-1912)
Origin/Maker: Arita Imari ware, Arita, Japan. Fuki-Choshun (富貴長春) maker's mark on base. Meaning Wealth, Nobility, Longevity and Youth, also translated as "Good fortune and long life" or "Wealth and Everlasting Spring". Alternative translations add that fuki (huki) also means peonies and is a symbol of wealth and choshun means roses, a symbol of everlasting spring as in, forever young. This mark was mainly used during the Meiji Period, from 1868-1912. During this period, Japan moved from being an isolated society to one with more open trade, where this one of the earliest trade marks not imitating a Chinese Imperial Nian Hao (reign mark).
www.gotheborg.com/marks/20thcenturyjapan.shtml
Size: 4 1/2" diameter (11.43 cm)
Weight: 4.6 oz (129 g)
Provenance:
Present: Ryan Snooks collection of Japanese & Asian Decorative Art
Previous: Private Collection
Collected: Santa Barbara CA antique store 2024
Condition: Item is used in good condition commensurate with age, see photos. No cracks or chips. Some light surface wear and scratches.
Subject: Imari dish with painted red, green, gold, orange, and underglaze blue and white (sometsuke) designs of Three Friends of Winter (Sho Chiku Bai), of Bamboo, Pine, & Plum in center and around outside, together with tako karakusa arabesque vine designs, and other flowers.
Location:
Antique Japanese Arita Imari Porcelain Dish Plum Bamboo Pine Fuki-Choshun 富貴長春