$200
Japanese, likely Edo period (1603-1868). A Bizen ware hanaire, a flower vase used in the traditional Japanese tea ceremony, flattened on front with an impressed organically shaped line, with a metal ring for wall hanging mounted on back above an impressed mark or signature, with gray ash glaze to one side over a field of glossy brown on the original reddish brown pottery base. Approximately 5 1/2" tall x 2 7/8" diameter at base.Provenance: From the Estate of Mr. Soichi Furuta, Woodstock, Georgia. Note: Soichi Furuta (1927-2011) was a Renaissance Man of sorts, beginning his career in fine art arena. After attending UCLA, he joined a creative design and packaging firm in New York where he later became president. The firm (Stuart, Gunn & Furuta) was responsible for packaging design for a number of major brands including Michelob, Hershey's, Vicks, and Nestle. Concurrently, Mr. Furuta taught graduate-level courses in design at the City University in New York, later, he served as an adjunct professor of literature at St. Andrews Presbyterian College in North Carolina. Later in life, Furuta penned a dozen books in both English and Japanese with subjects ranging from poetry to translations and even a memoir. He was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 1989 for his book of poetry, "Montefeltro the Hawk Nose" that references the artwork of the Italian painter Piero della Francesca. Soichi Furuta's fine tuned sense of poetry, aesthetics and simple beauty are apparent throughout his Read more…
Auctioneer:
Ahlers & Ogletree Auction Gallery
Date:
2015-03-21