Friday, September 10, 2021
TMC
There
is something about a pot that is traditional and practical but at the same time
has certain modern elements in its appearance. I think for the most part the
modern is really just an extension of the potter's voice working through clay in
a medium that is thousands of years old and a tradition that goes back to the
middle ages in Japan to the birth of chanoyu. This rather straight forward
Bizen mizusashi by Yokoyama Naoki is an excellent case in point where there are
certain constraints placed upon the potter to fulfill the purpose, the intent
of the pot, operating within some traditional guidelines while exercising a
degree of personal expression and energy to create a modern pot. Casually
thrown, the form has been interrupted by the addition of not only well placed
lugs but by marks impressed as the wheel was moving to trick the eye in to
seeing the continued sense of motion once the pot was fired. Likewise the well
conceived lid has had marks added to create visual interest and to clearly
define the lid with its pinched knob to act as the termination of the form. Though
perhaps now better known for his shizen neriage and nerikomi work, this
mizusashi clearly shows a maturity of Yokoyama's noborigama firing where the
surface has just the right amount of ash deposit and flashing to enhance and
not obscure the surface presenting a timeless modern classic to a centuries old
tradition.
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