Japanese sculpture

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Japanese Fine Art, White Sculpture, Organic Ceramics, Wind Direction, Sculptures Céramiques, Art Japanese, Arte Inspo, Japanese Pottery, Japanese Ceramics

Specializing in Japanese fine art for over forty years, Joan B Mirviss LTD features Japanese screens and scrolls, woodblock prints (ukiyo-e), and most prominently, modern and contemporary Japanese ceramics at its Madison Avenue gallery. Joan B Mirviss LTD continues to bring audiences in New York, around the country and abroad, the very best in Japanese fine art, featuring solo and collaborative shows by important ceramists and thematic exhibitions of paintings, screens, prints and ceramics…

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Movement In Ceramics, Fujikasa Satoko, Michelangelo Sculpture, Principle Of Design, Japanese Fine Art, 3d Forms, Antique Fairs, Principles Of Design, Art Japanese

Specializing in Japanese fine art for over forty years, Joan B Mirviss LTD features Japanese screens and scrolls, woodblock prints (ukiyo-e), and most prominently, modern and contemporary Japanese ceramics at its Madison Avenue gallery. Joan B Mirviss LTD continues to bring audiences in New York, around the country and abroad, the very best in Japanese fine art, featuring solo and collaborative shows by important ceramists and thematic exhibitions of paintings, screens, prints and ceramics…

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Shakōki Dogū (Goggle-eyed Clay Figurine)earthenwareearly Final Jomon period, 1,000 – 800 BCETōhoku regionH. 7 ⅞ × W. 5 . × D. 3 . in. (19.8 × 14.9 x 8.9 cm)Ex-collection Ken Domon, a renowned photographer, and the Teshigahara Family, which established the Ikebana Sogetsu School.To be exhibited in Japanese Art: Prehistoric to Contemporary. Courtesy Mika Gallery. Jomon Period, Ikebana Sogetsu, Alien Artifacts, Ancient Goddesses, Ancient Statues, Ancient Pottery, Prehistoric Art, Art Premier, Ancient Sculpture

Shakōki Dogū (Goggle-eyed Clay Figurine)earthenwareearly Final Jomon period, 1,000 – 800 BCETōhoku regionH. 7 ⅞ × W. 5 . × D. 3 . in. (19.8 × 14.9 x 8.9 cm)Ex-collection Ken Domon, a renowned photographer, and the Teshigahara Family, which established the Ikebana Sogetsu School.To be exhibited in Japanese Art: Prehistoric to Contemporary. Courtesy Mika Gallery.

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