Friday, December 18, 2020

ONI-SHINO REVEAL

If I had known that this recent storm was going to affect our area as much as it has I would have asked the sender of this pot to hang on just a couple more days. Though I had seen a couple of so-so photos (sorry B.) I was waiting for the Oni-Shino reveal as I was aware it was also packed in its own blue suit. As fate would have it, it arrived safe and sound and this is the first photo of the piece that I have taken besides those of the outside box and interior packing. All decked out in its very own custom shifuku, this Oni-Shino vase clearly announces its surface of thick, crackled feldspar Shino with areas of iron pouring out small gaps all coated in a thin sheen of natural wood ash for the intense firing. There is no mistaking the works of Tsukigata Nahiko from those influenced by his pottery in his own day well into the 21st century. As the saying goes, often imitated but rarely duplicated I am constantly amazed that the combination of simple feldspar, iron and natural wood ash make for such a unique and idiosyncratic surface in the hands of Tsukigata which seemingly can not be truly duplicated. Adding to the fine coat of green ash is a nice ring of crustier ash around the mouth and a bit more for good measure of the face of the piece. The pot, like the cat is of course now out of the bag as it were and fully photographed and I will post an overall photo of this rather unique hanaire at some point in the near future.