Friday, March 19, 2021
DEVIL MAY CARE (SHINO)
I don't know a lot about the
potter Kido Sadaaki (b. 1941) other than he fires in Shigaraki and just outside
of Osaka in Daito City and that he started making pots later in life in the
1990s. Kido left a regular business job to pursue pottery and immediately honed
in on first Shino-yaki and then Shigaraki pottery with there being a bit of
overlap as you can see in this photo. This particular chawan was first glazed
and then placed in a wood kiln where it would appear to have been toward the
front of the kiln (perhaps 1/3 of the way back) where it received a fair amount
of ash creating this vivid and tumultuous surface where feldspar and ash
painted a very clear narrative across the surface. Where the thinker crusty or
running ash didn't take hold, the white Shino is coated in a thin and
glistening layer of green, glassy ash that adds a luminescent quality to the
bowl. In many respects, like the works of Tsukigata Nahiko and Kumano Kuroemon,
Kido fires his kiln(s) in a way to maximize its ferocity and imbue the Shino
surface with qualities that are normally reserved for wood kiln firings at
rather intense heat. I think that given the rather unique glazing and firing of
Kido Sadaaki what he may lack in natural affinity for clay he more than makes
up for in bravado and his devil may care approach to just getting the work made
and fired and there is certainly something to be said about embarking on a long
journey one step at a time especially if it is in double-time.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)