The first major presentation of Japanese arts and culture to the West was at Paris'
Exposition Universelle in 1867, and Satsuma ware figured prominently among the items displayed. The region's governor, the
daimyō, understood early the economic, prestige and political advantages of a trade relationship with the West. In order to maintain its connection with Satsuma, for example, Britain offered support to the Daimyō in the
1868 rebellion against the shogunate. The Paris Exposition showcased Satsuma's ceramics,
lacquerware, wood, tea ceremony implements, bamboo
wicker and textiles under Satsuma's regional banner—rather than Japan's—as a sign of the Daimyō's antipathy to the national
shogunate. Following the popularity of Satsuma ware at the 1867 exhibition and its mention in
Audsley and
Bowes'
Keramic Art of Japan in 1875, the two major workshops producing these pieces, those headed by Boku Seikan and Chin Jukan, were joined by a number of others across Japan. "Satsuma" ceased to be a geographical marker and began to convey an aesthetic. By 1873, workshops specializing in painting blank-glazed stoneware items from Satsuma had sprung up in
Kobe and
Yokohama. In places such as Kutani,
Kyoto and
Tokyo, workshops made their own blanks, eliminating any actual connection with Satsuma. From the early 1890s through the early 1920s there were more than twenty
etsuke factories producing Satsuma ware, as well as a number of small, independent studios producing high-quality pieces. Eager to tap into the burgeoning foreign market, producers adapted the
nishikide Satsuma model. The resulting export style demonstrated an aesthetic thought to reflect foreign tastes. Items were covered with the
millefleur-like pattern or to the point of
horror vacui. They were typically decorated with "'quaint' ... symbols such as
pagodas,
folding fans, or
kimono-clad [females]". Pieces continued to feature
floral and bird designs, but religious, mythological, landscape and
genre scenes also increased. There was new interest in producing decorative pieces (
okimono), such as figurines of beautiful women (
bijin), animals, children and religious subjects. The palette darkened, and there was generous application of raised gold. ==1885–1930s==