
thumb|White tenmoku Ofuke ware bowl, medium stoneware with rice-straw [[ash glaze, between 1700–1850 Edo period ]] Tenmoku (天目, also spelled "temmoku" and "temoku") is a type of glaze that originates in imitating Chinese Jian ware (建盏) of the southern Song dynasty (1127–1279), original examples of which are also called tenmoku in Japan.
thumb|White tenmoku Ofuke ware bowl, medium stoneware with rice-straw [[ash glaze, between 1700–1850 Edo period ]] Tenmoku (天目, also spelled "temmoku" and "temoku") is a type of glaze that originates in imitating Chinese Jian ware (建盏) of the southern Song dynasty (1127–1279), original examples of which are also called tenmoku in Japan.
Jian ware tea bowl shapes are conical in form with a slight indent below the rim. They are about in width and in height. The emphasis is on the ceramic glaze, where a number of distinct effects can be produced, some including an element of randomness that has a philosophical appeal to the Japanese. The tea-masters who developed the Japanese tea ceremony promoted the aesthetic underlying tenmoku pottery.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).