Friday, April 13, 2018
WET & DRY
Though perhaps not a household name outside of Japan,
Takezawa Nobuo (b.1944) is a stelwart practitioner of the revitalized Echizen
pottery tradition. A product of Echizen himself, born in Fukui, Takezawa founded
his pottery, Hachikugama in 1973 and uses locally dug clay and fires in a
traditional kiln using techniques that date back centuries to create what is
readily identifiable as modern Echizen-yaki. Like the other Rokkoyo, the
Echizen pottery was traditionally wood fired without glaze and the resulting
surfaces known as shizen-yu or at times haikaburi, the method in which many of
Takezawa's works and this pot in particular was fired. The taut thrown tsubo
was incised about the surface with a sharp tool and then the firing took over
the rest of the decorating and glazing duties of the piece. Covered in a wide
array of wood fired attributes, the surface ranges from areas of wet and dry
textures and light and dark tones that are both visually engaging and
communicate a sense of the old and new and some subtles mysteries as well. Having
a reserved appearance if you listen carefully it has quite a lot to say about
not only the tradition of Echizen but of the way in which it was fired and
about the potter, Takezawa Nobuo himself. I hope this slideshow video gives a
sense of all these things and more.
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