Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 8.djvu/471

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INDEX

  • Kohi, alleged potter, 8.
  • Kōichi, potter, 316.
  • Kojiro, Fukushima, potter, 115.
  • Kokichi, potter, 316.
  • Koishikawa porcelain, 394.
  • Kokubu ware, 367.
  • Komagai ware of Korea, 140.
  • Komatsu, Kaga, pottery, 247; revival of Kutani ware, 248.
  • Konō Senemon, potter, 144.
  • Kōraizaemon, Ban, Korean potter in Nagato, 344; descendants, 345.
  • Koran-sha, keramic society, influence, 113.
  • Korea, early intercourse with Japan, 7; potters taken to Japan, 31, 42, 54, 135, 138, 159, 164–166, 175; confusion of Chinese and Korean keramics, 43–45; decline of keramic art, 45, 53; varieties of ware, 46–53; character of the ware, 53.
  • Kōren, female potter, 393; her modelled ware, 393.
  • Kōsai, Suniiemon, potter, 339.
  • Kōsai. See Chōzo.
  • Kōsan, amateur potter, 178.
  • Koseki Tonroku, potter, 100.
  • Ko-Seto ware, 261, 266, 270.
  • Koshiro ware, 321.
  • Kosobe ware, 381.
  • Kotō porcelain, 371.
  • Kozawa Benshi, potter, 387.
  • Kūchū, Honami, potter, 35.
  • Kuhei, Irie, potter, 218.
  • Kumakichi, potter, 227.
  • Kumamoto Prefecture. See Higo.
  • Kumanosuke, various potters, descendants of Yasuchika, 188.
  • Kumenosuke, Hasegawa, potter, 202.
  • Kurazaki Otojuro, potter, 346.
  • Kurin-ya Gembei, potter, 258.
  • Kuritarō. See Rokubei.
  • Kurobei, potter, acquires knowledge of enamelling, 181.
  • Kuroda Nagamasa, chief of Chikuzen, patron of keramics, 313, 318–320.
  • Kutani, Kaga, discovery of porcelain stone, 236; beginning of porcelain manufacture, 236; character of the Ao-Kutani porcelain, 237–239; character of the Ko-Kutani porcelain, 239–241; cessation of manufacture, 244; revival of the ware, 248–250; character of the revived ware, 251; second or modern revival of the ware, 254; marks, 254; imitation ware, 318.
  • Kyōkan. See Tonroku.
  • Kyōmizu Kanzō, potter, 382.
  • Kyōmizu, Kyōtō, factories, 209; potters and products, 209–213; porcelain, 210, 212; composition of the faience, 232.
  • Kyosaku, Yama-no-uchi, potter, 108.
  • Kyōtō, Raku ware, 32–38; Kaempfer on its manufactures, 173; vicissitudes, 174; beginning of keramic industry, 176–178; keramic products before 1600, 179; Ninsei's art and influence, 180–186; beginning of enamelled decoration, 181; potteries, 182, 187; Mokubei's ware, 215; Shuhei's ware, 216; Kentei's unglazed pottery, 217; Takayama and Irie families, 218; Zengoro's ware, 219–225; other potters, 225–232; composition of porcelain, 234; kilns, 235; modem porcelain after Chinese models, 417; modern faience decorated under the glaze, 423. See also Awata, Iwakura, Kyōmizu, Mizoro.
  • Kyubei, potter, 246.
  • Kyūhachi, Mikuni, potter, 373.
  • Lacquer, on Sōshiro ware, 30, 326; on Arita porcelain, 92–94; on Kyōtō faience, 198; on Toyōsuke ware, 281.
  • Madasuke, potter, 340.
  • Maeda family, potters, 115.

441