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[Tea utensils/tea ceremony tools] Copy of Ninsei, Whose Sleeves Gosekku, by Yamaoka Zenko (Who's Sleeves Gosekku)

[Tea utensils/tea ceremony tools] Copy of Ninsei, Whose Sleeves Gosekku, by Yamaoka Zenko (Who's Sleeves Gosekku)

Product Code: kaigu-1

Regular price 98,736 円
Regular price Sale price 98,736 円
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●Kaigu refers to a complete set of clothing, weapons, horse equipment, etc.
In addition, the four essential utensils used in the tea ceremony are a water jar, a ladle stand, a water container, and a lid rest, and are used to display on a daisu or long board.
It was brought to Japan by the Rinzai sect monk Nanpo Shomyo when he returned from Song, and the most famous example of this is the "Kangan Kaigu" (Chinese copperware set) owned by Sen no Rikyu.
At that time, most were made from copper.
Today's ceramic utensils first appeared at the end of the Edo period, but at the time they were still unfamiliar and not widely accepted by the people.
It was only after the Meiji period that they began to be widely distributed, and when the head of each school began to make his or her own "favourite items", the "Ryureishiki" style popularised by the 11th head of the Urasenke school, Gengensai, adopted the principle of using ceramic utensils, so they became indispensable to the early modern tea ceremony.
The "Ryureishiki" is one of the new tea ceremony cultures established by Gengensai in order to modernize the tea ceremony.
This is very different from traditional tea ceremonies, as tea is prepared using a desk and chair, and is known as chair tea ceremony.
It is said that the origins of this tea ceremony date back to the 1st Kyoto Exposition, held in Kyoto in 1871, when Gengensai came up with the idea to allow foreign guests to sit down and drink tea.
The water jar, water pitcher and lid rest can also be used separately.

Size: Water pitcher (approx. diameter 16.6 x height 16.1 cm)
Ladle stand (approx. diameter 6 x diameter 9 x height 18 cm)
Kensui (approx. diameter 14.4 x height 8.1cm)
Lid holder (approx. diameter 6.1 x height 6.1 cm)
Author: Yoshitaka Yamaoka
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Resides in Kyoto City
Born in Kyoto in 1966
Graduated from Kyoto Prefectural Vocational Training School
Graduated from Kyoto Municipal Industrial Testing Center
1987: Trained at the Kiyomizu Pottery Complex
In 1994, he studied under his father, Yoshinori Yamaoka, and began making pottery at the Yoshinori Kiln Studio in Iwakura, Kyoto.
Learning from the classics, creating innovative works with modern sensibilities and ingenuity
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Box: Wooden box

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