Illustrated is such a pot, a simple, for Hayashi Shotaro, E-Shino mizusashi made to be a functional vessel but with a unique, brutalist and sculptural appearance that looks exactly like the natural, cataclysmic forces that create mountain ranges which is exactly what this piece is meant to recreate in ceramic. Exhibited and illustrated in a Daiwa show and catalogue in 1993, Hayashi Shotaro calls these forms Renzan-mizusashi or mountain range mizusashi and from the craggy, almost geological forms to the mimicked horizon lines painted in thick iron under the pure white glaze it is very much like looking past the peaks of one range, perhaps the Japanese Alps to the next succeeding one and its narration in form and surface and looking well beyond the traditional pot meant to hold water. I think it would be hard to convey the presence and real aesthetic impact of this Renzan-mizusashi with a single photo or a video slideshow but at some point this is my intent. For now I hope this picture gives some perspective of this provocative mizusashi that if nothing else makes it clear where Hayashi Shotaro stands in the field of modern Mino pottery, perhaps very close to the pinnacle.
Monday, February 13, 2023
RENZAN
Hayashi
Shotaro started his education and career by studying with his brother Kyosuke
who was a rather traditional Mino potter with the tiniest flair of modernism
baked in to his pottery. Unlike his brother, Shotaro began to show an
inclination to walk along a different pathway that had distinct elements of
tradition infused with modern and sculptural elements distinguishing his work
and himself from the large crowd of Mino potters. By pushing boundaries and
definitions of archetypical norms, Shotaro began to create forms and ultimately
surfaces that challenged the established criterion of the Mino traditions and
creating at times objects that were carefully balanced vessels with both the
essential elements of the function of the forms with a sense of sculptural,
non-traditional renderings of everything from chawan and mizusashi to vase forms
and tsubo. As the years passed, his pottery, his forms became more bold, more
challenging and certainly more idiosyncratic leaving behind the more
conservative pathways of what one would
point to as traditional yet adding to the tradition that has become more
inclusive as potters test the boundaries and preconceived notions of what Mino
means.
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