7. Miyagawa Kozan


KOZAN Miyagawa  Kozan  (1842-1916)

香山

 Makuzu Makuzu workshop

真葛 

 

Miyagawa  Kozan, who’s  real name was Miyagawa Toranosuke, was born in 1842 from a long line of potters based in Kyoto. His father, known as  Makuzu Chozo, set up Makuzugahara, a pottery studio in the Gion district of Kyoto.  After his fathers dead in 1860 Miyagawa took over the family business in 1860, at the age of 18, using the name Makuzu Kōzan.  The name Makuzu was given by Yasui no Miya; the artistic name Kōzan by Kacho no Miya, both connected to the Royal Family.Initially he made tea utensils,as his father had. By the late 1860s he started to work at the Igi family kiln located in Mushiage, in what is now part of Setouchi.

The Makuzu business in Kyoto was continued by Zen-ō Jihei Kōsai (1846–1922), who took the name Miyagawa Kōsai, and maintained the traditional line of tea utensils. Kōzan’s period in Bizen had coincided with the Meiji Restoration what had brought about a collapse of the old regulation and financing of kilns. Kōzan was at the forefront of the successor policy of industrial development, which included crafts, called shokusan kōgyō.  In 1870 he set up the Makuzu workshop in Yokohama, producing Satsuma-style ceramics for a growing Western market. His workshop was large and progressive, quickly developing and producing a wide variety of styles as fashions changed. This was also a period in which modern pieces were deliberately made and sold as unsigned old Satsuma. It is considered a fact that the Makuzu workshop participated in the fraudulent trade up to 1876 at least. After the publication of  Frank Brinkley in The Chrysanthemum magazine of   1883 allegating Kozan as a notorious counterfeiter Kozan always carefully signed all his work.  Pieces are marked as Kozan, or Makuzu, or both, brands that can be drawn or impressed.

Some of his early export works used exaggerated, high-relief decoration (known as taka-ukibori or sculptural relief) and these became very popular with the Western market in the 1870s. It seemes that Kozan stopped this kind of work in the early eighties, and handed over the studio to his son Hanzan, while  he focussed more and more on the development and application of monochrome glazes, and later on the most beautiful cristalline glazes and new colours  what he became famous for. Kōzan continued to show innovative design and experiment with wonderful glazes until his death.  He exhibited at the Centennial Exposition of 1876, in Philadelphia including high relief vessels presaging later work. Kōzan also showed much development of lines quite independent of the Satsuma ware at First National Industrial Exposition of 1877 in Tokyo and was still successful at the 1893 World Columbian Exposition in Chigago, where other Japanese ceramics was not received well. In 1896 he was made an  Imperial Household Artist (Teishitsu Gigei-in). 

 

A few examples of taka-ukibori vases by Kozan 

 

The Makuzu Workshop 

Makuzu Kozan was succeeded  by his adopted son Miyagawa Hannosuke (Hanzan) (1859–1940), known as Makuzu Kōzan II  and later by the third generation Miyagawa Kozan. Miyagawa Kōzan handed over the running of the kiln to Hanzan in 1890, though the name remain unchanged, and most pieces were made bearing the ‘signature’, of Kōzan. Pieces signed Hanzan are very uncommon. Hanzan took in 1917 officially the name Kōzan II on the death of his adopted father in 1916. All the prizes that the factory continued to win in both International and National Expositions were awarded in the name Makuzu (Miyagawa) Kōzan.

 

The Makuzu Workshop ca. 1910

A few examples of the wonderful work of the Makuza workshop by Miyagawa Kozan and (bottom right) Hanzan.