Friday, October 18, 2024

JUST FOUR FOR FRIDAY; CHAIRE

This is sort of a follow up post showing off a group of five chawan by Bizen Juyo Mukei Bunkazai, Yamamoto Tosho. Like the previous post, these are literally photos of photos and are a bit grainy but I do think they get their point across showing off Yamamoto's mastery when it came to making chaire. The book these came from is dedicated to chaire, dozens and dozens of them and I honed in on this gang of four, just four because they said something to me specifically and if you were to thumb through the same book I am sure you would pick four entirely different pieces but this is my post (and blog) so here are my choices. Though there is something of a similar type in these four they are clearly different in firing, form and presentation of posture and character. I also think it is evident when surveying his chaire oeuvre just how fertile his imagination for form was relying on what came before and articulating what he had to say regarding Bizen clay, firing and his perception of the tradition.    

Yamamoto Toshu started in clay at an early age and founded his own kiln in 1933 along the way he gathered a profound knowledge about antique Bizen, hand picked details and attribute from the past and folded into them dignity, honesty and sophistication of earlier pottery creating his own unique vocabulary. As he matured, his strong ability and technique on the wheel leads to a facility in creating outstanding chadogu painted by antique archetpes from his studies, modern trends perculating during his early and fomulative years and his own developing inner vision of Bizen. I believe the chaire of Yamamoto Toshu stand out to this day as an enduring contribution to the tradition and potter's art in turn becoming the archetypes and role models for many post-war (post 1945) potters and even those to this day and likely for quite some time to come.

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