"If we are facing in the right direction, all we have to do is keep on walking." (Buddhist? Proverb)
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
BUMPTY-BUMP
Monday, June 29, 2026
PC&F
In the medieval period, feudal Shigaraki wares were born out of absolute necessity where these large, robust storage jars were the workhorses of agrarian life, designed to hold seed, water, and grain, the essential elements of survival and prosperity. Yet, as the centuries advanced, the early tea masters focused their attention on these unpretentious vessels and discovered an unexpected, quiet nobility. What was once vessels of pure function became the ultimate expression of wabi-sabi, an aesthetic celebrating the beauty of impermanence and imperfection. The natural ash glazes, painting their landscapes on this voluminous canvas where swelling shoulders made way for thick and visually enticing necks, mouths and lips, were not calculated by a painter's brush but given by the unpredictable nature of the wood-fired kiln.
In more modern times, Hoshino Ryosai does not settle to merely copy these ancient forms; he channels their spirit and using his inner voice creates something that stands as an amalgam of the old and new. The contemporary relevance of this tsubo lies in its steadfast defiance of mass-produced objects, in an age dominated by plastic uniformity, this jar demands that we stop and engage with the tactile, the rough, and the authentic. The burst of dark feldspathic spots across its surface tells a story of intense heat and physical labor, each pot is different, each is unique even within a series and kiln firing. Due to Hoshino’s dedication and many like him, the modern viewer time travels to a moment when human hands negotiated directly with elemental forces to dramatic and lasting effect. Hoshino Ryosai’s work stands as a testament to patience, keeping the arduous and fiery tradition of medieval Shigaraki alive, while offering a chaotic modern world a vital insight and reminder into much needed stillness, grounding, and enduring grace.
Friday, June 26, 2026
PEDIGREE
Interestingly enough it is in this teabowl by Murokawa Tsuguo, that a compelling dialogue between two distinct ceramic traditions is readily apparent, that of the body of work produced by Arakawa and the Suigetsu-gama and the pottery of old Iga. The accompanying signed box describes this bowl rather simply; IGA CHAWAN, fired in the demanding environment of a Mie Prefecture anagama however the visual and tactile vocabulary of the vessel is inescapable, pointing directly back to the potter’s formative decade at Suigetsu-gama under the profound influence of the late Toyozo Arakawa. Rarely is there such a striking testament as to how deeply a master's lineage can saturate a craftsman's hands, psyche and intellect, refusing to be erased by a change of venue , geography or in this case a change of scenery of one’s own workshop and kiln.
The form of this chawan carries a deliberate, anchored gravity that immediately commands attention, a posture and presence that again is linked back to Murokawa’s formulative years in pottery. It possesses a distinct visual and physical architecture that recalls the classic Momoyama revival tea vessels championed by Arakawa and others of the first half of the 20th centuries when giants roamed and rebuilt the traditions of modern Japan. The rim undulates with the intentional and softest of rhythms, avoiding any sense of rigid symmetry, while the walls descend into a subtly compressed waist fending off any fussy manipulation. Near the foot, the base tightens with assertive, curving gracefully and with purpose that present both visual and physical stability. Within this structural clarity the vessel commands an unmistakable presence; it stands with absolute certainty, commanding its space with hints of nobility required for its use in the tea ceremony, balancing rugged autonomy with classical restraint.
What makes this piece ultimately work as a cohesive entity is the [sophisticated] tension between its nominal classification and its actual surface. Rather than solely relying on the nature of an anagama’s accidental ash deposits across the pieces which is typical of traditional unglazed Iga, Murokawa has applied a controlled, vitreous glaze that speaks fluently of the language of the modern Mino tradition marrying his past with his present. Much of the bowl is enveloped in a pale olive-green glaze, pooling toward the base, the texture is distinctly waxy and matte with hints of wetness here and there and crusty ash, closely mimicking the prized aburage-hada (fried-tofu skin) of exceptional Ki-Seto ware. Though the intent of potter and firing may have been the creation of an Iga chawan, the use of glaze, the form and its combined features clearly give off the immediate impression of pottery normally located about 100km to the south-west.
Ultimately, this tea bowl stands as both testament and amalgam of past and present, master and student in its hybrid execution. Murokawa has taken the structural discipline and glaze sensibilities cultivated at Suigetsu-gama and subjected them to the atmosphere of an Iga firing. It is a lesson in modern convergence taking place all over Japan in modern times, demonstrating that a potter’s true pedigree cannot be hidden; it remains permanently etched like a monument, carved, chiseled and coerced from clay rather than stone.
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
TOO HIGH
Monday, June 22, 2026
(CU) MAJESTY
Friday, June 19, 2026
SHINSAI KAMON
The technique used on this mizusashi is Mishima, a testament to the rigorous precision of the Toraku lineage. Originating in Korea, this slip-inlay is reliant on the buncheong style which employs stamped or incised decorative elements, mostly geometric and floral patterns which are then filling white slip, creating the stark contrast between the body and the decoration. As the pot dries, the excess slip is scraped away and then bisque and later glazed in some transparent or translucent glaze to maximize the effect. In this piece, we see classic, oft used patterns of the family and kiln rendered with a precision and dedication that only a master of the Kyo-yaki tradition can achieve. The subtle use of purple and iron-oxide washes completes the shinsai kamon technique adding an additional depth to the precise design, softening the overall appearance and giving an illusory connection to paintings, silks and dyed fabrics known within the old Imperial capital.
This mizusashi and the pottery of the (Morisato) Toraku family is right at home in modern-day Kyoto and Kyo-yaki represents the "sophisticated rustic" aesthetic that defines the Kiyomizu-Gojo district. While many contemporary potters gravitate toward abstraction, the Toraku studio remains dedicated to the refinement of classical designs and decoration they are well known for. Unlike many modern-day potters and pottery, there are only hints of serendipity on the decorating, glazing and firing processes as its efforts are best rewarded in a rather calculated artistry. This approach creates a near standardization of technique and surface where though there are difference among the pottery, this work is more about how they connect with each other and the previous generations to create a tradition where the individual’s voice is quiet and more a whisper that a bold pronouncement. In many respects this style of Kyo-yaki helps bridges the gap between the rough, utilitarian roots of historical Mishima and the aristocratic elegance expected of Kyoto's centuries old aesthetic and traditions.
If ever so slightly out of synch with the 21st century, Morisato Toraku III has grasped the essence of this tradition and style while maintaining the “crispness” of this tradition while striving to infuse the vessel with a modern sense of volume and proportion. Through this insight, he has ensured that this mizusashi and the work of his studio are not merely copies of what has pasted, but a living continuation of Kyoto’s enduring ceramic legacy being ushered into the present day and beyond. It is a work of profound technical discipline and understated, under-appreciated beauty.
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
QUICK POST, SIMPLE POT
Monday, June 15, 2026
CLAY & COSMOS
When you look at the archeological record, there is a seismic shift that occurred in what amounts to a literal blink of a cosmic eye: the transition from actual stone to the fired vessel. Suddenly, we learned to shape the earth and trap fire for ritual, necessity and the promise of tomorrow, we turned raw clay into functional form. In the grand timeline of reality, this monumental leap happened in a flash as it bridges the gap between primitive survival and conscious creation, transforming chaotic geology into deliberate geometry, form and vessel.
This forces an existential question, what is time to us as curators, and what is time to a pot? We treat these vessels with immense care, even reverence, displaying them caring for them and treating them as precious markers of our own time and contemporary culture yet our stewardship is inherently fleeting. The pot itself exists on an entirely different metaphysical plane. Once formed and fired, the intense heat vitrifies the clay, freezing its trapped silica matrix into a durable, glassy structure rendering a pot immortal in terms of time if not animation. That matrix does not share our mortality, long after the flesh has returned to dust, long after our current empires have dissolved into myth and forgotten with a whisper reminiscent of Shelly’s “Ozymandias”, that silica matrix, the form, the structure will remain. It will survive for millions of years, a nearly indestructible relic waiting silently in the dirt and subject only to geological upheavals.
Surrounded by the quiet rhythm of the passing seasons, I often find myself drifting, contemplating our place in this web of recycled matter where the truth of the philosopher kings, Crosby, Stills & Nash* anthem echoes deeply: “We are stardust, we are golden, we are billion-year-old carbon.” The very atoms that comprise my hands, the carbon molecules in my bones, all of the necessary minerals waiting in the clay bed were all baked/ forged in the hearts of dying stars eons ago finding their way into something new, some momentary and some destined for some sense of longevity. Simply put, pottery is simply the act of one form of stardust reshaping another.
Ultimately, we must accept a humbling and yet, inescapable truth: we will have these objects for only a very, very brief moment in time, we will never truly own the pots we collect, nor the one’s we make as potters but there is a hint of immortality in that making. We are merely temporary guardians, passing them through our brief flash of consciousness. We hold them for an afternoon, a decade, perhaps a lifetime, before passing them along to the deep future, a future where the pot will endure, keeping watch over a universe that is in reality just beginning.
On a lighter note, here is something new(ish) from Bizen potter, Baba Takashi, an Oni-Shino guinomi. Though this fits broadly under the specter of Tsukigata’s Oni-Shino, I think it is safe to safe it falls within the general parameters of how I look at this specific surface. The form is simple enough with a strong wari-kodai and an interplay between feldspar, ash and iron the three requisite components of any Oni-Shino surface. As I mentioned, Baba is probably best known for his Kuro-Bizen with flourishes and highlights of cobalt across the surface adding a unique perspective to modern Bizen and this Oni-Shino work adds another avenue of pursuit for the innovative Okayama Prefecture native. Given the lead in to this guinomi, I wonder where this piece will be in 25, 100 or a thousand years, curious minds and all that.
(* I realize Joni Mitchell wrote WOODSTOCK but I prefer Crosby, Stills & Nash)
Friday, June 12, 2026
M3 MOMIJI
This vase was exhibited in 1993 and stands as a near perfect example of Tamaoki’s oeuvre where the vivid, purposeful color scheme is achieved through in this case, technical mastery of the technique which though is quite simple, there are complexities to this innovative use. I mentioned the near perfect technique; I focus on this in particular as the pot was fired in such a way that the entirety benefited from the kiln atmosphere where the surface is even all around. Though not uncommon, every aspect of this pot, from form, glazing, decoration and firing all had to come out just perfectly to create this vase as worthy an object as I can imagine, in my mind or in reality, where the museum is the final reservoirs of (such) human creativity.

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