The Cleveland Museum of Art

Collection Online as of September 27, 2024

Seal Ink Box with Snail

Seal Ink Box with Snail

1930s–90s
Location: not on view

Did You Know?

Shinkai Kanzan, who had trained with Yohei IV, went to college for painting before launching a successful career as a ceramist.

Description

Shinkai Kunitarō 新開邦太郎, who took the artist style name Kanzan 寛山, had a cute design sense and keen interest in birds, insects, and animals as subject matter. This seal ink box opens to reveal a diminutive snail in an orange hue.

Seifu Yohei III was the artist’s grandfather, and Yohei IV was his uncle and the older brother of his father, who specialized in throwing ceramics on the wheel. Shinkai studied ceramics with Yohei IV and attended the Kyoto City School of Fine and Decorative Arts, where he studied design and painting on the advice of his father; in the world of the ceramics studio, those who applied designs and paintings had a more elevated status than those who worked the wheel. In 1930, the year of his graduation, he first exhibited in the 11th Imperial Exhibition. From 1932, he went on to receive additional ceramics training from Kiyomizu Rokubei VI (1901–1980) after joining the ceramics society of Rokubei VI’s father, Kiyomizu Rokubei V (1875–1959). After World War II, he reinvented himself and exhibited extensively in national-level exhibitions, garnering numerous prizes. He later served as a jurist or committee member for many of the same shows. In 1989, he was awarded the Kyoto Prefecture Culture Award for Lifetime Achievement and remained active on the board of the Japan Fine Arts Exhibition, or Nitten, as late as 1992.
  • Maezaki, Shinya and Sinéad Vilbar. Colors of Kyoto: The Seifū Yohei Ceramic Studio. Cleveland, OH: The Cleveland Museum of Art, 2023. Mentioned and Reproduced: cat. no. 79, pp. 167–169
  • Colors of Kyoto: The Seifū Yohei Ceramic Studio. The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (organizer) (August 19, 2023-March 10, 2024).
  • {{cite web|title=Seal Ink Box with Snail|url=false|author=Shinkai Kanzan|year=1930s–90s|access-date=27 September 2024|publisher=Cleveland Museum of Art}}

Source URL:

https://www.clevelandart.org/art/2022.222