Monday, May 25, 2026
MEMORIAL DAY 2026
For memorial Day 2026, this quote comes to mind; “Although no sculpted marble should rise to their memory, yet will their remembrance be as lasting as the land they honored.” Daniel Webster
Friday, May 22, 2026
CASUALLY APPLIED
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
SO HAPPY TOGETHER
Monday, May 18, 2026
THE GOOD (M3)
”It is an unscrupulous intellect that does not pay to
antiquity its due reverence.” (Desiderius)
Erasmus
(*This picture contains an actual image of a pot or pots in an AI generated background or scenario)
Friday, May 15, 2026
TIME-TESTED
This Tamba haiyu (ash-glazed) guinomi by Nishibata Tadashi is a visceral landscape compressed into the palm of the hand. Though not exactly the mini-chawan that I gravitate toward, this roughly hexagonal piece is a rugged, mountainous form, somewhat heavy in appearance with hints of wood fired effects especially in the form of rich hi-iro on the base. There is a calming and quiet dignity baked into this vessel with six opposing panels forms a connected and individual visages all considered with a confident hand that allows the surface to speak its own unique language.
The exterior is a bit like a play, a drama of shifting temperaments, movement and elemental reactions to the heat of the kiln which is the time-tested crucible of all pottery. On one face, a thick, cream-colored ash glaze cascades down the sides like melting late season snow, pooling into a rich, opaque ivory. This "running" glaze comes face to face with the textured base, an iron-rich underworld of deep iron red and burnt sienna, a painter’s dream. The transition is not exactly smooth forming a chaotic boundary where the running ash glaze bites into the clay, creating a semi-volatile texture that feels ancient, almost volcanic.
What is potentially the "front" of the guinomi features a startling contrast to the rear, an angled, dark opening of clay color appears where the glaze has been dipped to create a casual void revealing clay texture and iron spots most likely created by using the finger-tips as a brush, spots appear, punctuating the space as primitive a decoration as man can make. The interior of the cup is where the alchemy reaches its zenith, a maelstrom created by chance and design. A pool of the swirling, running vitrified ash has settled in the well, cooling and creating a nebula of ash and perpetual motion.
Turning
the piece over, the simple kodai (foot) reveals the true nature
of the Tamba clay. It has become a toasty, orange-red earth, where the hi-iro
is further interrupted by contrasting marks where the piece was fired on wads.
The playful visual and tactile experience of this guinomi is one of constant
discovery, an ever-shifting landscape which only serves as a reminder that in
the hands of a master like Nishibata, the kiln is not just a tool, but an elemental partner in the work.
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
WHO'S WHO
especially: an
Italian ware of this kind (Merriam & Webster definition)
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I realize this
isn’t the best photo but wanted to share this from the “early days”, maybe it
was 1992 or 1993. For some reason, I had become a bit obsessed with this really
chaotically decorated tin glazed majolica with oxide pigments which also lead
me down the road of doing reduction lusters as well. This assemblage of
decorations was called, Who’s Who and was illustrative of the people and places
encountered on my bus and train ride into Cleveland proper seven days a week. There
was never a dull moment and I think this decoration makes that abundantly
clear. Thrown out of terra cotta, the pieces were glazed over in a slightly
off-white majolica glaze and then each one was painted in series or
individually depending on the piece. At the time, most every form I was working
with including the leaning tower of Piza jars (not shown), were employed but
here you have covered jars, teabowls, cups and saucers and small, one-person
teapots that I was having fun making. I am not sure if it is clear or not but
the cups and teapots all have pedestal feet, something I had started doing on
porcelain pieces a short while earlier and I liked the feel, look and
sometimes, the challenge. At any rate, I do remember this group of two dozen
pieces coming out of one kiln load and though there is some level of cringe
now, being in clay for a short while at the time, I was slightly pleased with
these way back when. (I should note that I have Alan Caiger Smith, Dick and
Patty Schneider and Linda Arbuckle to thank for pushing me down this particular rabbit
hole.)
Monday, May 11, 2026
GAKU HAGI
Friday, May 8, 2026
WIZARDRY
This shinsha mizusashi was made by Nakajima Hitoshi, the older brother of Living national Treasure Nakajima Hiroshi and despite his untimely and early death, his skill level, sense of form and surface and his remarkable glaze wizardry shine in most encounters with his work. Nakajima Hitoshi was precise in his throwing and glazing and his forms are models of perfection where most pots show no defects of line or scale, where lids fit perfectly and feet are exactingly well cut and attended to. Despite my description and the potter’s precision, his pots are not mechanical replicas of the antecedents, his forms show a strength and determination of his particular voice and can normally be picked out of the crowd if you will.
As a point to a previous blog post, Nakajima Hitoshi is another one of those “hidden gems”, a potter lesser-known outside of Japan but whose work is of such a high standard in terms of every aspect yet are blanketed in a distinctly Japanese idiom. This potter and his work deserve a rigorous visual and aesthetic inquiry as in my humble opinion, he most likely would have been Ningen Kokuho had fate not had a hand in other considerations.
Wednesday, May 6, 2026
INEVITABILITY
On a lighter note, here is a simple meandering fluted teabowl glazed over in my Ao+ glaze on a porcelain body. This sort of has that roller-coaster feeling in terms of movement and definitely reminds me of the old zoetrope and zoopraxiscope of the 19th century. I have used this technique under several glazes and it seems best suited for transparent and translucent glazes though temmoku and ash may be a good fit, maybe next cycle.
Monday, May 4, 2026
NONSENSE
Glowing moon hangs in the mist,
Watching over silent clay"
Shigaraki kogo by Furutani Michio, photo and nonsense by
the lone potter at Albedo 3 Studio with a bit too much time on his hands.




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