Kawade Shibatarō

Kawade Shibatarō (川出柴太郎, 1856–1921) was a Japanese cloisonné artist. For a while he was also the head of the Ando Cloisonné Company based in Nagoya.[1]

Cloisonné vase with design of peacock feathers by Kawade Shibatarō (Los Angeles County Museum of Art)

Many of his works are in collections today such as the George Walter Vincent Smith Art Museum and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Khalili Collection of Japanese Art of the Meiji Era.[2][3]

Along with Hattori Tadasaburō, Shibatarō developed the moriage or "piling up" technique which places layers of enamel upon each other to create a three-dimensional effect.[3]

Bibliography

  • Goodall, Hollis. "The 'Greater Taishō' Era: a Boiling Cultural Stew." Andon 97 (2014): 7-18.

References

See also

Media related to Kawade Shibatarō at Wikimedia Commons


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