Koyama Fujio, the Glossary
Koyama Fujio (小山富士夫; March 24, 1900—October 7, 1975) was a scholar of Japanese pottery and porcelain and Chinese ceramics.[1]
Table of Contents
9 relations: Chinese ceramics, Hajime Katō (potter), Idemitsu Museum of Arts, Japanese pottery and porcelain, Kaneshige Toyo, Rosanjin, Sam Francis, Six Ancient Kilns, Toyozō Arakawa.
- Japanese potters
Chinese ceramics
Chinese ceramics are one of the most significant forms of Chinese art and ceramics globally.
See Koyama Fujio and Chinese ceramics
Hajime Katō (potter)
Hajime Katō (加藤土師萌, Katō Hajime) (March 7, 1900 – September 25, 1968) was a Japanese potter. Koyama Fujio and Hajime Katō (potter) are 20th-century ceramists and Japanese potters.
See Koyama Fujio and Hajime Katō (potter)
Idemitsu Museum of Arts
is an art museum located in the.
See Koyama Fujio and Idemitsu Museum of Arts
Japanese pottery and porcelain
is one of the oldest Japanese crafts and art forms, dating back to the Neolithic period.
See Koyama Fujio and Japanese pottery and porcelain
Kaneshige Toyo
(from Okayama, Japan 1896–1967) was a potter in Imbe, Japan. Koyama Fujio and Kaneshige Toyo are 20th-century ceramists, Japanese potters and People from Okayama Prefecture.
See Koyama Fujio and Kaneshige Toyo
Rosanjin
was the pseudonym for a noted artist and epicure during the early to mid-Shōwa period of Japan. Koyama Fujio and Rosanjin are 20th-century ceramists and Japanese potters.
Sam Francis
Samuel Lewis Francis (June 25, 1923 – November 4, 1994) was an American painter and printmaker.
See Koyama Fujio and Sam Francis
Six Ancient Kilns
The Six Ancient Kilns (六古窯 Rokkoyō) is a category developed by Koyama Fujio (小山富士夫 1900–1975) in the post-war period to describe the most noteworthy ceramic kilns of Japan.
See Koyama Fujio and Six Ancient Kilns
Toyozō Arakawa
was a well-known Japanese ceramic potter. Koyama Fujio and Toyozō Arakawa are 20th-century ceramists and Japanese potters.
See Koyama Fujio and Toyozō Arakawa
See also
Japanese potters
- Bertil Persson (potter)
- Chōjirō
- Hajime Katō (potter)
- Hideaki Miyamura
- Hirasawa Kurō
- Hiroaki Morino
- Hon'ami Kōetsu
- Itaya Hazan
- Jin Katagiri
- Jirō Kinjō
- Kaneshige Toyo
- Kawai Kanjirō
- Kazuo Yagi
- Kobashigawa Eishō
- Koyama Fujio
- List of studio potters
- Makuzu Kōzan
- Masaki Sōzaburō
- Masaya Imanishi
- Morihiro Hosokawa
- Morimitsu Hosokawa
- Ogata Kenzan
- Okuda Eisen
- Rosanjin
- Sakaida Kakiemon
- Sakaida Kakiemon XIV
- Shuhei Fujioka
- Shōji Hamada
- Sueharu Fukami
- Takeshi Yasuda
- Tatsuzō Shimaoka
- Tiger Tateishi
- Tokuda Yasokichi
- Tomimoto Kenkichi
- Toyozō Arakawa
- Tsukitani Hatsuko
- Yi Sam-pyeong
- Yuki Hayama