Greetings all. I was looking to pick up a few cups in this style/range of glaze and have not found much info on here. There are a few online sources with good information as to the process and history of tenmoku/jianzhan wares, but very little relating to modern day artists and good sources to buy from these artists.
Was wondering if there are any collectors on here who could share some pieces (pics), knowledge, and reliable sources? I might as well layout what I do know-
1. Kamada Koji is the one artist I know for a fact commands high prices for his wares (and deservedly so.)
2. I know ArtisticNippon carries some nice pieces by a younger artist.
3. Some online sources seem very sketchy as far as quality to price is concerned.
Anybody have tenmoku from the Teaspring website? They are definitely on the affordable side, but the pictures quite frankly are not that great. I don't mind spending even more, given there is piece of mind that the ware is of a reputable artist and will not de-value considerably.
Thoughts, suggestions, your own questions are all very welcome and appreciated!
Re: Tenmoku, Jian Zhan Info please..
there are usually some interesting items on yahoo.jp. check this:
http://www.jauce.com/search/%C5%B7%CC%DC
hope it helps
http://www.jauce.com/search/%C5%B7%CC%DC
hope it helps

Re: Tenmoku, Jian Zhan Info please..
Those ones on Teaspring look nice to me, I totally did not see those hiding there.
More sources:
Verdant Tea
Teaware House
No idea about value appreciating or depreciating over time.
More sources:
Verdant Tea
Teaware House
No idea about value appreciating or depreciating over time.
Re: Tenmoku, Jian Zhan Info please..
Very interesting indeed. Prices are all over the map. Have you personally bought anything from there? Thanks!hobin wrote:there are usually some interesting items on yahoo.jp. check this:
http://www.jauce.com/search/%C5%B7%CC%DC
hope it helps
Re: Tenmoku, Jian Zhan Info please..
Yes, I had totally missed those on Teaspring myself the numerous times I'd been on the site, and only found them by googling tenmoku for sale.bintuborg wrote:Those ones on Teaspring look nice to me, I totally did not see those hiding there.
More sources:
Verdant Tea
Teaware House
No idea about value appreciating or depreciating over time.
Thanks for the links. Funny enough I placed my first order for one of the ones on teaware.house when the site launched. And I've been viewing Verdanttea's pieces just this weekend. Verdants reputation seems to be suffering from past fiascos, but the story and presentation of the bowls seems well done. My interest is mostly peaked by the hares fur pieces (which are quite pricey), but I'm afraid that it's a bad decision to pull the trigger on one of those. I certainly can't afford those prices on a regular, so it would likely the most and last time I spent that much on a jianzhan piece.
My interest really only is to add maybe 3 or 4 total cups/bowls to my humble little teaware collection. So I'm hesitant to spend that much unless someone could corroborate Verdanttea's facts and claims on the potter(master) who fired and crafted these. I see a lot more oil spot than hares fur pieces. Is it harder to produce hares fur pattern? (Anyone?)
Re: Tenmoku, Jian Zhan Info please..
i thought it would be relevant to post some stolen pictures here, these were posted across several groups and shared by many different members on facebook, how jingdezhen has changed to being "tenmoku-ed".. looks like tenmoku is going to catch on exponentially
~

left image = jing de zhen street image in the past, and right = now



left image = jing de zhen street image in the past, and right = now

Re: Tenmoku, Jian Zhan Info please..
yes, all the time... it's the japanese version of ebay. you can't bid directly but you have to use an agent (I use jauce.com but there are many others). the commission fee is 800 yen + 8%.LouPepe wrote:Very interesting indeed. Prices are all over the map. Have you personally bought anything from there? Thanks!hobin wrote:there are usually some interesting items on yahoo.jp. check this:
http://www.jauce.com/search/%C5%B7%CC%DC
hope it helps
Re: Tenmoku, Jian Zhan Info please..
authentic hare's fur bowls are from the song eraLouPepe wrote:Yes, I had totally missed those on Teaspring myself the numerous times I'd been on the site, and only found them by googling tenmoku for sale.bintuborg wrote:Those ones on Teaspring look nice to me, I totally did not see those hiding there.
More sources:
Verdant Tea
Teaware House
No idea about value appreciating or depreciating over time.
Thanks for the links. Funny enough I placed my first order for one of the ones on teaware.house when the site launched. And I've been viewing Verdanttea's pieces just this weekend. Verdants reputation seems to be suffering from past fiascos, but the story and presentation of the bowls seems well done. My interest is mostly peaked by the hares fur pieces (which are quite pricey), but I'm afraid that it's a bad decision to pull the trigger on one of those. I certainly can't afford those prices on a regular, so it would likely the most and last time I spent that much on a jianzhan piece.
My interest really only is to add maybe 3 or 4 total cups/bowls to my humble little teaware collection. So I'm hesitant to spend that much unless someone could corroborate Verdanttea's facts and claims on the potter(master) who fired and crafted these. I see a lot more oil spot than hares fur pieces. Is it harder to produce hares fur pattern? (Anyone?)
http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the ... arch/42455
99% of what you can buy on the internet are of course reproductions.
however I've seen quite a few nice hare's fur bowls on yahoo.jp. They are old (from the XX century however) and usually come with this box and they are affordable (no more than 5-6000 yen = 50 dollars. but if you're lucky even less)
http://www.jauce.com/auction/q98600029
why are hare's furs (Jianyao) most treasured? It's a zen thing: japanese monks that went to china to learn buddhism and tea usually came back with these bowls...hope this helps
Re: Tenmoku, Jian Zhan Info please..
Hehe. Yes, I have noticed some weird stuff about Verdant Tea's site. Like that the dimensions of their tea bowls are obviously wrong. I told them that but they didn't fix it. But I really like their small Jianzhan stuff so I ordered from them twiceLouPepe wrote: And I've been viewing Verdanttea's pieces just this weekend. Verdants reputation seems to be suffering from past fiascos, but the story and presentation of the bowls seems well done.

Re: Tenmoku, Jian Zhan Info please..
Wow! Thanks for this. And here I was wondering why not much qinghua was showing up on west-faced vendor sites.kyarazen wrote:i thought it would be relevant to post some stolen pictures here, these were posted across several groups and shared by many different members on facebook, how jingdezhen has changed to being "tenmoku-ed".. looks like tenmoku is going to catch on exponentially~
left image = jing de zhen street image in the past, and right = now
If this is not a sign of a trend, then I don't know what is

Re: Tenmoku, Jian Zhan Info please..
Huge help thanks! Seems to me I need to start considering an orderhobin wrote:authentic hare's fur bowls are from the song eraLouPepe wrote:Yes, I had totally missed those on Teaspring myself the numerous times I'd been on the site, and only found them by googling tenmoku for sale.bintuborg wrote:Those ones on Teaspring look nice to me, I totally did not see those hiding there.
More sources:
Verdant Tea
Teaware House
No idea about value appreciating or depreciating over time.
Thanks for the links. Funny enough I placed my first order for one of the ones on teaware.house when the site launched. And I've been viewing Verdanttea's pieces just this weekend. Verdants reputation seems to be suffering from past fiascos, but the story and presentation of the bowls seems well done. My interest is mostly peaked by the hares fur pieces (which are quite pricey), but I'm afraid that it's a bad decision to pull the trigger on one of those. I certainly can't afford those prices on a regular, so it would likely the most and last time I spent that much on a jianzhan piece.
My interest really only is to add maybe 3 or 4 total cups/bowls to my humble little teaware collection. So I'm hesitant to spend that much unless someone could corroborate Verdanttea's facts and claims on the potter(master) who fired and crafted these. I see a lot more oil spot than hares fur pieces. Is it harder to produce hares fur pattern? (Anyone?)
http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the ... arch/42455
99% of what you can buy on the internet are of course reproductions.
however I've seen quite a few nice hare's fur bowls on yahoo.jp. They are old (from the XX century however) and usually come with this box and they are affordable (no more than 5-6000 yen = 50 dollars. but if you're lucky even less)
http://www.jauce.com/auction/q98600029
why are hare's furs (Jianyao) most treasured? It's a zen thing: japanese monks that went to china to learn buddhism and tea usually came back with these bowls...hope this helps

Re: Tenmoku, Jian Zhan Info please..
Toru has a selection of tenmoku pieces on his site. They're all by Hashimoto Daisuke, I own one of the Yunomi and I love it.
http://www.artisticnippon.com/product/f ... items.html
It's too bad the cups are mostly sold out though.
http://www.artisticnippon.com/product/f ... items.html
It's too bad the cups are mostly sold out though.
Re: Tenmoku, Jian Zhan Info please..
Frisbeehead wrote:Toru has a selection of tenmoku pieces on his site. They're all by Hashimoto Daisuke, I own one of the Yunomi and I love it.
http://www.artisticnippon.com/product/f ... items.html
It's too bad the cups are mostly sold out though.
I've definitely checked those out. Pretty nice for the price. Hopefully there will be more soon.
Re: Tenmoku, Jian Zhan Info please..
Anyone know if most Chinese/Japanese tenmoku is fired in electric or gas kiln? I don't think many are fired with wood, but if they are then I'm sure cost would be more. Not sure if there are any benefits or downfalls to any particular method.