Illustrated is an early, interesting wood fired yohen style Shino chawan that was thrown out of a sandy, buff clay with an array of color changes from a soft caramel colored surface to areas of rich red with ash effects as well as lustrous and iridescent details on the lip as well as punctuations making their way through the pours of the glaze. The intriguing surface clothes the form complete with throwing marks to a T while also hiding small areas of spatula work that break up the uniformity of the bowl. At its core, this was made as a rather practical chawan, there are no bells and whistles and the pragmatic form and well attended kodai are meant for use while through experience and firing the surface has added a rich environment to a pot that be just perfect in use or as I am constantly saying, just hanging out on a shelf and showing off just ever so slightly.
Monday, May 19, 2025
SHOWING OFF
Friday, May 16, 2025
SAKE-WAN
Illustrated is a simple little piece, entitled, “red sake bowl” this small pot is a spitting image of one of his larger chawan forms down to form, surface and the kodai, it isthe perfect mini-wan in this case intended for sake. The glaze is a wonderful landscape of colors, depth and texture where a universe’s totality seems painted within the overall surface just adding to the somewhat mysterious and contemplative narrative. Not to sound redundant, but I don’t usually go for raku pottery, but when I do, I choose Heinai, Konishi Heinai II.
Wednesday, May 14, 2025
DUSTED AND REVISITED
Monday, May 12, 2025
SHELFIE*
(*Shelfie was not my idea, it came from a Face Book group on Japanese pottery)
Friday, May 9, 2025
IRON FOREST
In the book, KIMURA MORINOBU; Sakutoh Go-Ju Nen 1951 to 2000, there is much larger forest tile decorated in a nearly exact approach as this framed one, the date is 1996 (Heisei 8) while this one is not illustrated it was exhibited at the Osaka Takashimaya Department Store sometime in the mid to late 1990s. All in all this is a rather nice presentation of another dimension of a potter who has dedicated a life to his pottery art and in this case conjures up an iron forest with nothing more than a paintbrush , a bit of clay and some toasty temperature.
Wednesday, May 7, 2025
EoD
Monday, May 5, 2025
THREE MOVES LATER
As for this Finch jug, the surface of this red clay had a coat of black to brown slip applied where it appears either or depending on the lighting together with a slip trailed decoration around the entire form. The whole pot is rather sturdy in its throwing with a thickly potted mouth and a strong and very functional handle also decorated with slashes of slip. This is clearly intended as a rugged and functional pot and clearly succeeded in that task though it still sits mighty pretty on a shelf, three moves later where it is looked at several times or more a day.
Friday, May 2, 2025
WHAT I LIKE ABOUT YOU II
Illustrated is a simple Haku-Enyu mizusashi with a thick crackle style slip over a buff stoneware now darkened to a toasty brown from the firing. On the face and back of this form, shaped like a rhombus, are flora designs, resisted in the slip application which now stand in perfect contrast to the pure white texture of the overall form though there are some areas of pink blushing and subtle gohonde style spotting. The mizusashi is finished off with a crisp, tapered lip in which a classic, custom roiro-urushi lid fits to complete the form both functionally and visually. When asked recently what I liked about the rather simple and older style piece, the truth is, just about everything.
Wednesday, April 30, 2025
LATE AFTERNOON
Though this Hamada Shoji quote may be apocryphal, I find it rather engaging, even playful; “Oribe is not a collection of forms, but a way of being”.
Monday, April 28, 2025
CAST A SHADOW
Friday, April 25, 2025
WONDERFUL MEMORIES
As for the four jugs, I am not really sure of when Bill began making these forms though I suspect it was thoroughly cemented during his stay working at the Leach Pottery. These pieces have that classic English, Leach appearance complete with stamped decoration on a couple of them. I wish I had a photo or photos of these finished and though I may have somewhere I was just not able to lay my hands on any. At any rate, you can imagine them decked up in rich temmoku duds with some ash accents as well as his favorite celadon glaze, Whitings 1, 2, 3, 4 Celadon, maybe I am being nostalgic, but this brings back wonderful memories.
Wednesday, April 23, 2025
GROUP PHOTO
Monday, April 21, 2025
IGA?
Friday, April 18, 2025
SUBJECTIVE?
Wednesday, April 16, 2025
ONE, TWO, THREE
Monday, April 14, 2025
THE VOICE OF A POTTER
Though Matsuzaki Ken makes a wide variety of these simple henko forms, at the end of the day they are anything but simple, the form has been carefully considered to allow the surface treatment and firing to maximize the piece, a canvas for the varying landscape of ash and glaze. Though there may be a multitude of these form in several sizes and surfaces, each presents it own unique story, narrating the voice of a potter who spent extra years with his master in an effort to break free of his weighty influence, clearly at this is task, Matsuzaki Ken has excelled.
Friday, April 11, 2025
LIVE OR MEMOREX II
On a side note, for anyone considering acquiring a similar piece or a piece by Yokoishi Kasuke XIII in general, these pots are sturdy, solid, weighty and by no means some half-hearted attempt at mass production. Though the wood signed box is a bit on the economical side, the vase and glazing is honestly top notch and if you like sancai or Nagasaki sancai in particular that this is likely the pottery and potter for you.
Wednesday, April 9, 2025
SIMPLE, SQUARED
Monday, April 7, 2025
IN ALL PROBABILITY
Friday, April 4, 2025
FOUR SEASONS
This vase was made by Kitade Seiko (b.1926),born in Kaga Prefecture and student and son of Kitade Tojiro, launching his career in earnest when he was selected for the 6th Nitten Exhibition in 1950. Like his father, Seiko adds naturalistic, Kutani inspired devices, designs and decoration to his work which is meticulously crafted and painted where sometimes simplicity rules and others where the surface is densely decorated with complex and well thought out patterning. Working in stark decoration over white porcelain, using cobalt or red pigment as a canvas or the combination of the prior, this octagonal gourd style vase is a wonderful example of his work which is true to the style of his father, Kaga and Kutani while leaving room for his own unique interpretation of all three.
Wednesday, April 2, 2025
LOCAL INSPIRATION
Monday, March 31, 2025
FLOATING CLOUDS
As you can see in this vase made by Miraku Kamei XIII there is a streamlined elegance to the form, the superfluous details are cast away relying on the purity of line/form and enticing and intriguing surfaces. By combining oyu (straw yellows) and rokushoyu (green-blue) glazes, Miraku has brought movement and life to a rather simple and stylized form acting almost like floating clouds on a static form pointing to the highly detailed and articulated fish lugs and broad distinct mouth and lip of the pot. As I stated, this is a simple form with intriguing and curious details that are highlighted by a complex surface of movement and subtle painterly qualities that are as timeless as the Takatori tradition now in its 15th generation and moving toward another century of dedication to an ideal and devotion to purpose and ceremony.
Friday, March 28, 2025
ACCOMODATING
Wednesday, March 26, 2025
WHAT IS THE PLURAL OF FLUTE?
This was clearly an end of day
pot, not thought out and just thrown using some clay already wedged up. Obviously,
it was slightly thought out as it was thrown thick enough to flute vertically
and horizontally which interrupts the flow of the movement of the surface. There
is a simple lid surrounded by concentric bands to add so movement and interest
to that as well and completed with a slab impressed handle based on a Cubist
apple stem. The idea to this spur of the moment pot is pretty simple and since a
fluted surface looks good, I went with my Oribe and accents of iron which have
created cascades of color running down the furrows. By the way, what is the
plural of flute in this context, is it as simple as flutes?
Monday, March 24, 2025
NONE THE LESS
Friday, March 21, 2025
WHO?
Wednesday, March 19, 2025
Monday, March 17, 2025
WEE BIT-O-GREEN
Friday, March 14, 2025
OSC REVISITED
A while back I suffered a rather catastrophic computer crash and have been working daily rescuing data from the old computer and recently came across this older slideshow video. I realize I posted a static photo of this Oni-Shino chawan by Hayashi Shotaro previously but thought the group of photos helps fill in the blanks, adds detail and perhaps builds the sense of volume of the piece that a single picture certainly would not. Enjoy!
Wednesday, March 12, 2025
NEXT CYCLE?
The teabowl is glazed over in my temmoku glaze and then was dipped in an iron red that was quickly combed with my fingers before the surface could dry. The effect is a bit obvious where dark tendrils of color mingle with the droozy, running iron which always reminds me a bit of the partridge feather technique. One other feature worth mentioning is that the bowl is punctuated in small, reflective iron crystals that just cover the surface of the glaze, a nice little bonus to the overall runny effect. Every time I come across this picture, it reminds me I need to make a few more of these pots instead of treating them like they are in the rear-view mirror. Maybe next cycle?
Monday, March 10, 2025
JUST ANOTHER VASE
Illustrated is a tall, conservative E-Shino hanaire by Hori Ichiro. Thrown out of a buff, mogusa (?) clay, the casual form shows off its pronounced throwing marks and is sub-divided by a rough and perfectly placed should that defines the body and neck of the pot. The face of the pot was spontaneously decorated with a grasses design which it is clear that Hori has completed countless times before, all leading up to the rather serendipitous glazing where the interplay from thicker to thin and the running Shino all enhance and quite frankly create the rather feudal appearing landscape.
Though just
another vase at some level, the final appearance makes for a rich surface where
the underglaze iron, the purity of the white glaze and the various other cast
of characters work in perfect harmony to make for a Shino vase that to my eye
is quite unique or perhaps idiosyncratic to Hori Ichiro. In thinking about the
general field of the modern Shino tradition, there are a number of potters who
have developed rather unique looks from Kato Kozo to Suzuki Goro with Hori
fitting into that group how have decided to use the past and their inner voice
to unlock the potential of a specific orthodoxy allowing it to be present and
help move it along, one pot and firing at a time. To this task and within the
categories of Ki-Seto, Seto-Guro and Shino, I think few are as up to the
challenge as is Hori Ichiro.
Friday, March 7, 2025
Wednesday, March 5, 2025
COG-WARE
Monday, March 3, 2025
CUSTOM-TAILORED
Though this piece is quite attractive in natural light and incandescent lighting, it clearly comes out of its shell and leaves all inhibitions behind when highlighted by the afternoon sun. Like with a number of potters that are on my short list, I am always looking forward to seeing my next Sasaki piece be it temmoku or Ki-Seto.
Friday, February 28, 2025
TWO-VUE
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Wednesday, February 26, 2025
TWELVE PLANES
As mentioned, this was made by Jeff Oestriech some long while back and though the surface clearly shows some influence in the MacKenzie monotone, the pot is clearly something new. Gently squared, each side has three casual faceted cuts creating a total of twelve planes which though no longer round make for a comfortable grip and lots of lip to imbibe from. Though the exterior profile of the foot remains round, the cuts create a distinctly complimentary addition as a four-footed pedestal that match up quite well with the soft geometry of the yunomi overall. Though I was reticent to use this yunomi, I am glad I have broken it in as nothing beats using a friendly pot, gifted from a friend and made by a potter who thinks a bit outside the box but keeps a watchful eye on function just as it should be.