Nr. 100694236

Verkauft
Hideki Hayashi – farbgestalteter quadratischer Fußteller mit chartreusefarbenem Band und - Porzellan - Hideki Hayashi - Japan - Shōwa Zeit (1926-1989)
Höchstgebot
€ 25
Vor 21 h

Hideki Hayashi – farbgestalteter quadratischer Fußteller mit chartreusefarbenem Band und - Porzellan - Hideki Hayashi - Japan - Shōwa Zeit (1926-1989)

– Hideki Hayashi’s “colour sculpture” approach: carving, drawing-like incision, then glazing as composition – A vivid chartreuse stripe set against stone-grey and earthy brown, with etched grids and abstract marks – Footed square form: reads as both functional dish and small sculptural “panel” for display Summary: This contemporary footed square dish by Hideki Hayashi is built around a striking chartreuse band that cuts through a textured, incised surface of greys and warm earth tones. The decoration combines scored grids, short linear incisions, and rubbed-looking areas that give the glaze a layered, architectural feel. The form is intentionally irregular at the rim, while the raised feet lift the piece like a platform, adding shadow and presence. It sits comfortably in the “studio craft” category: practical enough to use, yet visually strong enough to display as an object. For European collectors, it offers a clean, modern colour accent with distinctly Japanese restraint in the handling of surface and space. There are ceramics you reach for every day, and ceramics you place down carefully, because they change the atmosphere of a room. This dish belongs to the latter. It has the quiet confidence of an object that does not need ornament in the usual sense—its beauty comes from structure: how colour, line, and texture are organised. The piece is a square dish raised on small feet, giving it a slight lift and an “architectural” stance. The edges are not perfectly straight, which keeps the form human and handmade. That gentle irregularity is important: it prevents the work from feeling like a design product, and instead makes it feel like a one-off studio piece. The surface is where the real conversation begins. A single chartreuse band runs across the field like a highlighter stroke over a map—fresh, contemporary, and slightly unexpected in ceramics. Around it, muted greys and brownish tones behave like weathered stone or plaster. Fine incised grids, short marks, and faint linear scratches sit within the glaze like drawing trapped under glass. The result is both graphic and tactile, and it rewards close looking: the more time you give it, the more it reveals. In use, this is a dish that makes even a simple serving feel intentional. The chartreuse band acts as a “stage line” for small foods—sweets, olives, sliced fruit, or a single piece of wagashi—while the textured ground provides a refined, understated backdrop. For collectors who prefer to display, it also works beautifully upright on a shelf, where it reads like a compact abstract artwork: colour field, line work, and texture in balance. Pieces like this are often made in small numbers because the surface is not printed or repeated—it depends on hand-cut marks and the unpredictable logic of glaze. That combination of control and chance is exactly what draws many collectors to contemporary Japanese ceramics: the work stays calm at a distance, but becomes richly complex up close. Shipping & Handling We ship worldwide via DHL or EMS with full insurance and tracking. Professional packing ensures safe arrival; combined shipping available for multiple wins. Local customs duties are the buyer’s responsibility. Seller Guarantee We specialise in authentic Japanese ceramics and guarantee this piece’s authenticity. Questions welcome – we reply within 24 hours.

Nr. 100694236

Verkauft
Hideki Hayashi – farbgestalteter quadratischer Fußteller mit chartreusefarbenem Band und - Porzellan - Hideki Hayashi - Japan - Shōwa Zeit (1926-1989)

Hideki Hayashi – farbgestalteter quadratischer Fußteller mit chartreusefarbenem Band und - Porzellan - Hideki Hayashi - Japan - Shōwa Zeit (1926-1989)

– Hideki Hayashi’s “colour sculpture” approach: carving, drawing-like incision, then glazing as composition
– A vivid chartreuse stripe set against stone-grey and earthy brown, with etched grids and abstract marks
– Footed square form: reads as both functional dish and small sculptural “panel” for display

Summary: This contemporary footed square dish by Hideki Hayashi is built around a striking chartreuse band that cuts through a textured, incised surface of greys and warm earth tones. The decoration combines scored grids, short linear incisions, and rubbed-looking areas that give the glaze a layered, architectural feel. The form is intentionally irregular at the rim, while the raised feet lift the piece like a platform, adding shadow and presence. It sits comfortably in the “studio craft” category: practical enough to use, yet visually strong enough to display as an object. For European collectors, it offers a clean, modern colour accent with distinctly Japanese restraint in the handling of surface and space.

There are ceramics you reach for every day, and ceramics you place down carefully, because they change the atmosphere of a room. This dish belongs to the latter. It has the quiet confidence of an object that does not need ornament in the usual sense—its beauty comes from structure: how colour, line, and texture are organised.

The piece is a square dish raised on small feet, giving it a slight lift and an “architectural” stance. The edges are not perfectly straight, which keeps the form human and handmade. That gentle irregularity is important: it prevents the work from feeling like a design product, and instead makes it feel like a one-off studio piece.

The surface is where the real conversation begins. A single chartreuse band runs across the field like a highlighter stroke over a map—fresh, contemporary, and slightly unexpected in ceramics. Around it, muted greys and brownish tones behave like weathered stone or plaster. Fine incised grids, short marks, and faint linear scratches sit within the glaze like drawing trapped under glass. The result is both graphic and tactile, and it rewards close looking: the more time you give it, the more it reveals.

In use, this is a dish that makes even a simple serving feel intentional. The chartreuse band acts as a “stage line” for small foods—sweets, olives, sliced fruit, or a single piece of wagashi—while the textured ground provides a refined, understated backdrop. For collectors who prefer to display, it also works beautifully upright on a shelf, where it reads like a compact abstract artwork: colour field, line work, and texture in balance.

Pieces like this are often made in small numbers because the surface is not printed or repeated—it depends on hand-cut marks and the unpredictable logic of glaze. That combination of control and chance is exactly what draws many collectors to contemporary Japanese ceramics: the work stays calm at a distance, but becomes richly complex up close.

Shipping & Handling We ship worldwide via DHL or EMS with full insurance and tracking. Professional packing ensures safe arrival; combined shipping available for multiple wins. Local customs duties are the buyer’s responsibility.

Seller Guarantee We specialise in authentic Japanese ceramics and guarantee this piece’s authenticity. Questions welcome – we reply within 24 hours.


Höchstgebot
€ 25
Surya Rutten
Experte
Schätzung  € 300 - € 400

Ähnliche Objekte

Für Sie aus der Kategorie

Japanische Kunst

Suchalarm einrichten
Richten Sie einen Suchalarm ein, um benachrichtigt zu werden, sobald neue passende Objekte verfügbar sind.

Dieses Objekt wurde vorgestellt in:

                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    

So kaufen Sie auf Catawiki

Mehr zum Käuferschutz erfahren

      1. Etwas Besonderes entdecken

      Entdecken Sie in unseren Auktionen Tausende von besonderen Objekten, die von Experten ausgewählt wurden. Sehen Sie sich die Fotos, die ausführliche Beschreibung und den Schätzwert der besonderen Objekte an, die Sie interessieren. 

      2. Höchstgebot abgeben

      Finden Sie etwas, das Sie begeistert, und geben Sie das Höchstgebot ab. Sie können die Auktion bis zum Schluss mitverfolgen oder unser System für Sie bieten lassen. Dazu müssen Sie einfach nur den Maximalbetrag eingeben, den Sie für das jeweilige Objekt ausgeben möchten. 

      3. Sichere Zahlung durchführen

      Bezahlen Sie Ihr besonderes Objekt und wir verwahren Ihre Zahlung, bis Ihr Objekt unversehrt bei Ihnen angekommen ist. Wir wickeln alle Transaktionen mit einem zuverlässigen und sicheren Zahlungssystem ab. 

Haben Sie etwas Ähnliches zu verkaufen?

Unabhängig davon, ob Online-Auktionen Neuland für Sie sind oder ob Sie gewerblich verkaufen – wir helfen Ihnen, mehr mit Ihren besonderen Objekten zu verdienen.

Objekt verkaufen