Intentional or not, I immediately think of thick melting ice and snow slowing revealing the stone underneath though I suspect this type of landscape conjures up all kinds of memories and associations to each individual viewer. Perhaps one of the outstanding aspects to Tsukigata work is that no matter how many of a particular form you see, each and every pot has its own unique voice and especially landscapes. As I have seen a number of this form in varying sizes in this Nezumi-Shino surface, Ki-Seto, Oni-Shino, Muji-Shino and others, each piece is connected initially by form but each piece presented a nearly alien appearance to the other making it clear that though manipulated by the maker through glaze and firing, it was the fire that had the final say on what each pot would look like, maybe more than any other factor. In the end experience, technique and knowledge are one thing in the creation of a pot but without surrendering the pot and at least a bit of one's ego to the kiln and flames, these pots would be all the less so let's be thankful for those crucial decisions.
Monday, March 11, 2024
MOUSEY
Though
perhaps best known for his original and innovative Oni-Shino, besides being an
all round renaissance artist, Tsukigata Nahiko was well versed in the full
spectrum of the Mino tradition. Having a foundation in a wide array of glaze
making, Tsukigata made a large number of pots that have quite a bit in common
with their classical antecedants and this particular vase is no exception.
Though neither rare or common, this vase dates to the late 1980s to the late
1990s and is typical of work which he described as Nezumi-Shino, once again
taking his unique approach to the style where a highly active iron/ cobalt underglaze
was used with a thick, viscous Shino glaze leading to this vivid look. There is
an array of "special effects" where some of the colorants have boiled
up through the surface; browns, blacks, blues, greens and turqouise perculate
to the top layers of the glaze creating a rather unique landscape that like
much of Tsukigata's works can easily be attributed to his hand (and mind) where
what seems ordinary becomes anything but.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment