“Out our bedroom window
The landscape frozen
The footprints of deer”
A Rambling Blog About A Potter And Pots
“Out our bedroom window
The landscape frozen
The footprints of deer”
Today was just one of those Mondays,
I had plans, things to be thrown, glaze made and some odds and ends. At exactly
7:36am that all changed, the explosion off in the distance of a transformer
blowing and the repeated cracks and thuds of trees falling all around and, in
that instant, we were without power. Plans changed, no studio work which gave
me a few extra moments here and there to take a few pictures. As you can see in
the photos the trees, snow and the whole region is covered in an inch of ice,
even the currently vacant bird’s nest, trapping us at the end of a 100-yard,
uphill driveway in our house for the day and possibly several. The power as you
may have surmised has come back on, the house is at 56 degrees and now climbing
again. With any luck I can get several small covered jars and a group of soup
bowls made tomorrow but with another snow storm now at the front door, maybe
making plans isn’t all it's cracked up to be.
Illustrated is one of those pieces, totemic in presence and posture and all about surface and texture. Made by Nagaoka Masami, this appears to be hewn out of clay with direct and forceful facets and rough impact marks created by paddling. The two tiers appear like a medieval tower, fired in the path of an angry yet benevolent fire creating a surface of runny ash coating the surface creating a sense of wetness that goes on forever. This is exactly the type of work that drew me Japanese pottery though I do have to admit, Arakawa and Kawai Kanjiro had quite some magnetic attraction as well. I could go on but I think it is easy to see how I got here despite a love for most things made out of clay that show a well-conceived combination of form, texture, surface and concept, East or West.
Happy Holidays, Merry Christmas, Festivus for the Rest of Us, Happy New Year and just the best for everyone, even non-potters moving into 2026!
I should also mention this is a rather old photo taken just after it arrived, at least a decade ago and photographed against a black background to try to emphasize the form, texture, surface and volume. Since photography is not my strong suit, all I can do is hope that the presence and posture come through, that is all I can hope for.
“Through every rift of discovery some seeming anomaly drops out of the darkness, and falls, as a golden link into the great chain of order.” Edwin Hubbel Chapin
“Most discoveries even today are a combination of serendipity and searching.” Siddhartha Mukherjee
“Where the spirit does not work with the hand, there is no art.” Leonardo da Vinci
This was made by Toki potter, Kato Mitsuhide which if you read my blog, you may remember as the creator of the funky, cool Ki-Seto koro that I have posted previously. Among other Mino styles, the tradition also showcases Mino-Iga where the pot is often woodfired with or without any seed glaze and also has iron accents splashed or trailed across the surface. As you can see, this hanaire is covered over in a rather uniform coating of textured ash with areas which have blackened a bit, breaking up the overall monotone coloration. I guess I am still not 100% sold on the description but I’ll go with, the potter knows best.
(Hollywood backdrop courtesy of Tsujimura Shiro)
Feeling like seeing an old friend, I spent some time taking a group of new photos including a series of HBD (Hollywood backdrop) photos to get new perspectives of the piece. This photo uses a picture of the moon that I took a couple of years back as a background which adds just enough light and atmosphere to the chawan to give it a whole new look. I apologize for posting up yet another photo of this bowl but like with a number of other pieces, I find myself eager to see what comes up in the rotation. That being said, for me, there is very little that we own that would “eclipse”* this wonky chawan.
(* Eclipse, see what I did there?!)
“Strength is a matter of the made up mind” - John Beecher
This simple, textural guinomi was made by Yamato Kiyoshi whose social media presence keeps one up to date on his work and firings. Having established his own kiln, the Meizan-gama in 2000, his work has been widely exhibited including at a number of traditional Kogei exhibitions and at the Takashimiya Department Stores. Though I have seen a number of his pieces, just judging from this singular encounter I think it would be a safe bet that not only the work is of a high level but it is clearly rooted in the Hagi tradition while clearly part of a new generation moving the needle forward, pot by pot.
(* Not necessarily a disco song reference unless you want it to be)
This is available and you can see more of this teabowl over on my Trocadero marketplace;
https://www.trocadero.com/stores/albedo3studio/items/1510052/ROBUST-ORIBE-MENTORI-TEABOWL
As I survey this chawan and the work of Ando Hidetake, I am reminded of this single line taken from a recent interview which adds dimension to his pottery; “The true mastery of Mino ware pottery is an illusion, but that is also why you never end up chasing it, never tire.”
Illustrated is a rather exceptional Oni-Iga chawan by Tsukigata Nahiko, perfect for a Friday. This chawan is neither my pot, nor my photo but I was able to handle this bowl recently on this side of the Pacific and it has everything one could want from this technique and this potter. Awash in texture and changing effects and attitudes, the large, slightly ovoid form fills the hands and is just the perfect Oni-Iga landscape where iron, ash, slip and grit all collide and commingle to make for a perfect vessel filled with strength and a robust, challenging posture. Over the years I have seen quite a few of these bowls in print and in person and I think it is safe to say, this is heads above the rest and likely would come in at a 9.5/10. Though I suspect there is always a better one out there somewhere, I have yet to see it and I am constantly on the lookout and with any luck, I will post some of my photos of this chawan, those photos are for another day.
This large Echizen tsubo was made by Nishiura Takeshi and as you can see in the ash streams, the beautiful flowing blue ash that cascades down the pot from about the halfway point of the piece, at its widest point. I think it is the fullness of the belly of this pot that helped accelerate the movement of the ash, where movement and motion almost overwhelm the viewer. The extremes of the firing process and the right choice of wood create these ash runs filled with streaks of blue within blue and covered over in random punctuations of frosty ash crystals making for a landscape akin to a wintery wonderland though perhaps from some far off, distant planet.
Though I know I have used this quote before, Leonardo da Vinci’s brilliance best captured the importance of details in this single, solitary line; “Details make perfection, and perfection is not a detail”, well, I couldn't agree more.
The body of this small Iga koro was thickly potted, the form is simple showing throwing marks and then the form is broken up with incised spatula indentations creating a lobed form. The lid is hand hammered copper with abstract geometric patterns pierced through the piece, sukashi style to allow the incense within the escape and permeate the immediate area. Though a rather traditional vessel, the koro takes on a rather modern appearance where it seems like the 17th century and the 1950s coexist in perfect harmony.