Friday, February 20, 2026
PINE BARK & RAIN
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
A FEW OF MY FAVORITE THINGS
This is another pot from a while back, a double lidded Oribe style slipware jar which makes lid throwing just a bit more complicated. Thrown out of stoneware, applied black and then white slip before combing the decoration. There isn’t anything too complicated here; simple covered jar, two lids but it is the combination of a few of my favorite things that makes it all the more interesting, Oribe and slipware. Over quite a few years of making pots, the bulk of my English slipware inspired pottery has been based on terra cotta clay but moving up in temperature to involve any number of my Oribe glazes together with another traditionally based style of work like combed or trailed slipware has been a real enjoyable adventure and honestly has probably prolonged my level of patience before I normally just go, well, enough of that!
For what it’s worth, here is one of my favorite quotes as it applies here; “Enjoy the small things in life because one day you’ll look back and realize they were the big things.” Kurt Vonnegut
Monday, February 16, 2026
HARMONY
Thursday, February 12, 2026
THE PROCESS IS CONTINUOUS
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
BASIC
Monday, February 9, 2026
THE PAST
Konishi Heinai II who specialized in Raku and Iga pottery had quite the skill for filling his clay works with a sense of timeless where they appear far older than they are. Was he a potter born out of time or a potter determined to forward an aesthetic that time cannot and should not abandon at a time when modernity and art stylings seem to prevail? I am perpetually thankful that there are potters who see the past as an adventure to explore everyday moving forward.
Friday, February 6, 2026
FRAGRANCE
What one can take away from Morinobu’s koro is the sense of purpose, where function is paramount and the intent visually is rooted in the allusion of fragrance where a small amount of clay, ash and fire build a bridge between the physical and emotional realms. I many respects, I would expect nothing less from Kimura Morinobu where potter and pottery look to Kyoto aesthetics, then skillfully infused this vocabulary into much of his work.
A butterfly poised
On a tender orchid,
How sweetly the incense
Burns on its wings Matsuo BashÅ









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