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  • Sakaida Kakiemon
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  • Sakaida Kakiemon started his porcelain business following the fall of the Ming dynasty in China and the succeeding disruption of traditional Chinese porcelain exports to Europe. Sakaida Kakiemon is said to have learned the enamel porcelain technique from a Chinese artisan in Nagasaki in 1643. He was the first in Japan to practice overglaze enameling (applying enamel on top of the glazing), a technique developed in Kangxi China. He also refined the method for producing a translucent white glaze.
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abstract
  • Sakaida Kakiemon started his porcelain business following the fall of the Ming dynasty in China and the succeeding disruption of traditional Chinese porcelain exports to Europe. Sakaida Kakiemon is said to have learned the enamel porcelain technique from a Chinese artisan in Nagasaki in 1643. He was the first in Japan to practice overglaze enameling (applying enamel on top of the glazing), a technique developed in Kangxi China. He also refined the method for producing a translucent white glaze. The first pieces were produced in 1643, with Chinese pigments. They are also called ko-Imari, as they were shipped to Europe through the harbour of Imari. Kakiemon ware was extensively exported to Europe by the Dutch, until the Chinese industry was reestablished with the stabilization of the Qing dynasty, and the Dutch then shifted their orders to China, which started to manufacture imitations of the Japanese ware, known as "Chinese Imari". Sakaida Kakiemon's work is said to have been the probable inspiration for Chantilly and Meissen porcelains. The Kakiemon productions almost disappeared by the end of the 18th century, but were revived in the 20th century by his descendants. The most important European collections are in Hampton Court in London, and in the Zwinger in Dresden.
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