Monday, August 12, 2024

PAST TO PRESENT

Quite a long while ago a friend sent me an email saying he would be sending me a chawan that I may be interested in or at least looking at. Several days later this chawan arrived well packed in an unmarked wood box but the work itself is unmistakably by Kawai Kanjiro. Rifling through several catalogues and The MINGEI magazine (#556, Ex. No8) I found several nearly identical chawan to this one with this decoration though I suspect there are far more as this form and design work so well together as do most of Kawai's work. The rich iron tessha surface is so reflective and metalic making for the ideal canvas for some rozome decoration and a few experienced strokes of red and blue to complete the bowl. As for the form, perched atop a tall pedestal foot the bowl in this case has a classic wan-gata style that most likely found it origins back in the Edo period lacquer ware of the time borrowed and modernized for a new purpose. All in all this is a rather classic chawan by Kawai Kanjiro with a nod to the aesthetics  of Kyoto which helped nourish his creativity and was his home throughout his entire lifetime where his art connected past to present.    

"Anyone can make beautiful things," says Kawai-san. "The capacity for expression and creation is in everyone, but not all of us realize this. We work and produce in spite of ourselves. The unknown self drives us on always." (* Quote from WE DO NOT WALK ALONE by Kawai Kanjiro that I take to heart and always hope that he is right!)  

(I apologize for the single, poor quality picture it is all I have from this encounter that happened at least three cameras and a long time ago.)

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