was a Japanese ceramist and businesswoman. She led the Eiraku workshop in Kyoto, becoming its fourteenth head upon the death of her husband Tokuzen;[1] she was one of few women to head a crafts workshop in Japan.[2] At her death she was succeeded by Shozen, a nephew of her husband;[3] in his turn he was succeeded by her adopted son.[4] A presentation set of coffee cups and saucers produced under Myōzen's direction was acquired by the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery in 2018.[2] Another work, a mizusashi with bamboo in porcelain, was acquired by the Seattle Art Museum in the same year.[5]