IGA-KARATSU
I
just recently received a handful of catalogues from a friend who was recently
in Japan. My friend is a book collector and in searching book stores
occasionally stumbles on to pottery catalogues, the interesting ones he picks
up and sends to me as long as they are 500yen or cheaper which is his decision,
not mine. In this most recent group was a rather old Tsukigata Nahiko catalogue
that is mostly in black and white with the usual cast of characters from 1972
with the anomaly here and there. In this catalogue was the illustrated chawan
that is described as Iga-Karatsu and details are a bit sketchy at best with
what looks like a thin ash glaze over the whole bowl and areas of natural ash
built up where the bowl was facing the front of the kiln.
This chawan certainly
has a rather unique, medieval appearance to it and after combing through
multiple references, I did not come across anything described in this
particular way though I suspect the term Iga-Karatsu likely predates this pot.
I can't say I know exactly what the motivation was in the description of this
teabowl but I am sure that Tsukigata had his own rationale though not having
ever seen another pot quite like this, I wonder in the end if this was the
ultimate goal or a random series of fortuitous events. I suspect we, well I may
never know unless another chawan, mizusashi or vase shows up tomorrow with the distinct
hakogaki; IGA-KARATSU CHAWAN, as one can guess, stranger things have happened.
P.S.
Thanks for sending the catalogues!
No comments:
Post a Comment