This stunning book explores the diversity of porcelain made in Japan for the domestic and export markets from the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries through selections from one of the finest private collections of Asian porcelain in the United States.
Japanese Porcelain from the Frelinghuysen Collection features pieces of blue and white and polychrome porcelain made for both the domestic and export markets. The collection is especially rich in material from the later eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a period that has received less scholarly attention to date. A particular focus are pieces decorated with Dutch figures and ships that were made for Japanese consumers curious about the only Europeans allowed into the country from 1641 to 1854. Through these objects we can explore how Japan interacted with an increasingly interconnected and changing world and see how people in Japan and around the globe used Japanese porcelain to eat, drink, and decorate their homes.
Japanese Porcelain from the Frelinghuysen Collection follows Becky MacGuire’s Four Centuries of Blue and White: The Frelinghuysen Collection of Chinese and Japanese Export Porcelain (2023) in highlighting part of this incomparable collection. The book opens with an essay on the Japanese porcelain industry followed by beautifully illustrated entries that explore the design, function, and cultural context of individual objects.
Japanese Porcelain from the Frelinghuysen Collection
Ronald W. Fuchs
May 2026
ISBN: 978-1-915401-19-9
Hardback
280 x 245 mm
208–256 pages
Approx 75 illustrationsAbout the author
Ronald W. Fuchs II is a graduate of the College of William and Mary and the Winterthur Program in American Material Culture at the University of Delaware. He is the editor of the journal Ceramics in America and has worked as a curator at Winterthur and the Reeves Museum of Ceramics at Washington and Lee University, specializing in Chinese and Japanese export ceramics.


