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.
Monday, March 31, 2025
FLOATING CLOUDS
At its core, this is a rather simple vase, elegant in its
presentation with hints of Chinese porcelain thrown in for good measure. This hanaire
has all the characteristics of the evolved tradition where over the centuries
Takatori ware became more elegant and cultivated in form and surface to both
meet the prevailing tastes and to create a ceramic canvas for a specific ideal.
The crisp lines and subtle details act as a vessel that in some ways in this
instance is a pedestal for the exotic fish lugs that have become a calling card
among the modern, posts 19th century Takatori Miraku potters right down to the
current head of the family, Miraku Kamei (Masahisa) XV. Springing from a century’s
old tradition, dating back to almost 1600, modern area potters relied on older
Takatori ware ideals/ archetypes to appeal to the somewhat conservative nature
of the establishment chajin and under Kamei XIII the Takatori teawares moved
from being a regional pottery to having far greater national exposure. At its
core, Miraku Kamei XIII (1883-1956) made his pottery specifically oriented
toward those who practiced (chajin) and collected articles (chadogu) for the
tea ceremony (chanoyu) and over time he gained the reputation as a nearly
peerless maker of chaire.
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