This mentori-hanaire is pure simplicity, perfect lines, full, dynamic volume and a surface that is one part simplicity and another part complexity in just measured balance. Adding to the landscape, each faceted line shows through the slip along with part of the lip focusing one’s attention away from the purity of the surface, surveying details that almost seem out of place yet end up helping to define the form and pot overall. It is clear that Yoshimura spent a lifetime pursuing and dedicated to kohiki slipware while adding his own modern and idiosyncratic fingerprint to a rather old tradition which spans centuries and countries in its origin.
Monday, June 16, 2025
BLAST FROM THE PAST
Friday, June 13, 2025
A BIT OF EVERYTHING
I am sure that I am repetitive in my use of descriptions
for a great number of wood fired pots but despite that fact, I think I choose
my words somewhat carefully and with an eye on what I am actually thinking and
not some device easily put to use. What gets me there is this katakuchi style
mizusashi, truly this has that medieval, old presence, like it was plucked out
of the kitchen and pressed into service by some tea master of old including the
manufacturing of a custom lid to complete the package. The surface both inside
and out is just a wonderful array of effects, a bit of everything as it were,
on this well fired pot, crafted by the hands Sugimoto Sadamitsu and fired under
his watchful eye and decades of experience to make such a simple, humble and captivating
vessel.
Timeless, another descriptor I use well too often is
perhaps among the best ways to characterize this mizusashi as it is seemingly
not bound in the past or the present, it somehow is on its very own parallel
timeline. The foot is flat and covered in ash while the front and back present
somewhat differing landscapes where the one side is covered in streaking,
cascading ash and the other is a blend of runny ash and rich red hi-iron
color fumed during the firing. However, it is the interior that holds the
biggest surprise, once the custom lacquer lid is removed, the interior is a
series of waterfalls that culminate in a large, pure emerald green pool that is
a bit like encountering a pot at the end of the proverbial rainbow. Timeless,
wabi-sabi, medieval, classic; in the end it doesn’t matter how it is described,
this Shigaraki mizusashi has quite the landscape and just sings instead of
speaking.
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
SAFE BET
Monday, June 9, 2025
I SEE WHERE YOU ARE GOING
Now I won’t go as far as to say it has that old Edo style appearance but it does capture some of that feeling while making a break from the stiffer forms and glazes of many of the 70s Mino potters, excluding Arakawa and Tokuro. In truth, I find it rather intriguing to be able to draw that “through line” in the work from present day all the way back to where it began.
Friday, June 6, 2025
YAKISHIME SHIGARAKI
Yoshisuji Keiji (b.1952) lives and works in Shizuoka Pref. and apprenticed under the internationally recognized Shigaraki potter, Kohyama Yasuhisa. Making a wide variety of wood fired, yakishime pottery out of Shigaraki clay, Yoshisuji makes both functional and non-functional ceramics including some sculptural pieces which includes his well know and sought after “apple” and Buddha hand okimono. Though this chawan shows the distinct influences of his master, Yoshisuji works with his own forms and distinct firing style creating pieces that pay tribute not only to Kohyama but the wood fired tradition rooted in Shigaraki and now spread across much of Japan.
You can see this chawan over on my Trocadero marketplace;
Wednesday, June 4, 2025
EoD REVISITED
Monday, June 2, 2025
TSURUKUBI
When I first saw this pot I thought this was a slightly unusual form for Furutani Michio and then over the years I have seen several more though each one it own unique piece with its own unique surface also proving that no form gently nuanced or sophisticatedly designed was beyond the reach of potter and flame. This vase has a rather engaging tactile presence where rough gives way to smooth in patches like it is battling for some supremacy but the real winner in this fight is the viewer seeing the array of wood fired and visual effects that go beyond traditional Shigaraki pottery clearly representing the firing, surfaces and philosophy of one of the greatest Shigaraki (and Iga) potters of the 20th century, Furutani Michio.
Friday, May 30, 2025
RECIPRICOL
The chawan is by Ii Koji who I know very little about though I have seen several chawan, a Kuan style celadon vase and misc. guinomi, yunomi and small plates. The surfaces are somewhat similar but I thought this one worked quite well among those that I have seen. With any luck this will find favor at its new home, be used hard, put away dry and enjoyed for many years to come.