
It will likely come as no surprise that I have chosen a
pot by Tsukigata Nahiko as my second entry into my museum mentis meae and
hopefully my explanation will excuse my personal bias toward the potter. The
placement of this mizusashi in an uncluttered, display case gives a visual
depth to the pot which as with many pictures, pots can suffer from their
intentional austerity or their clutter of every day displays. This simple form
was classically employed by Tsukigata Nahiko over the breath of his career,
examples date back to the late 1960s and early 70s and run at least until 2001,
the last “datable” mizusashi I have encountered of this shape. In defense of my
choice, I should also mention that there are two mizusashi that are similar in
style to this piece at the Tsukigata Daitobu Museum, one with a ceramic lid and
one with a lacquer lid. This particular piece belonged to an advanced collector
who shared my interest in the potter where it commingled with a wide array of
pottery by mostly Ningen Kokuho and certainly, in my opinion held its own. Depicted in my mind’s museum with the
help of AI*, this mizusashi is a classic representation and even near
perfection of but one of the many specific types of Oni-Shino, the surface is
clear, active and even luminescent with areas of ash built up around the entire
form and appearing like a tamadare style waterfall cascade at the very front of
the form. Among this avenue of Oni-Shino, there is a singularity of nobility
present in this pot which Tsukigata choose to name, “Snowy Egret”. With the
name, it clearly echoes the regal and naturalistic qualities and there are few
better examples where form, surface, firing and concept all have pulled
together through experience and serendipity to create a museum level work. As
you look beyond the depth of this complex surface, the bones of the pot are
pure functional simplicity, cloaked in a lyrical and contemplative visual
narration of fire and a coalesced landscape present a near perfect object for
the ritual of tea ceremony. In the end, I choose this mizusashi for my museum
because of its sustained nobility and its classic character and characteristics
of Tsukigata Nahiko, qualities the best pots exude and many pots and potters
should aspire to.
“To appreciate the noble is a gain which can never be torn
from us.” Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
(*This picture contains an actual image of a pot or pots in
an AI generated background or scenario)