Wednesday, June 18, 2025

WAY BACK WHEN

On a recent phone conversation, a fellow collector was talking about Matsuzaki Ken and his Yohen-Shino at which point I mentioned that way back when I had done a fair amount of experimenting and had also come up with a Yohen Shino glaze back in the very early 90s while working at Cleveland State University. In point of fact, after coming back from seeing a group of majolica and faience pots I decided I wanted to create a luster Shino and started making up  tests in Jan 1992 and by Feb 1992 I had hit upon my first successful glaze surface, ST212/2/92y (Shino test #212, 2/92) that you can see illustrated in the pictures of a teabowl from the first large batch of this group of Yohen-Shino. Having taken some cues from Alan Caiger Smith I was able to, firing in a rather healthy reduction atmosphere to create a surface that had a rather lustrous, iridescent surface which was the first time I had ever seen this effect on contemporary pottery*.      

To be clear, I am not saying I invented this but rather I had never physically encountered it before nor had I seen it any magazine or publication (this did pre-date the internet by quite a few years). What I can say about this surface is that I did not decide to carry out this testing based on something I had seen but rather something else, arts and crafts pottery and reduction lusters on majolica triggered this whole line of inquiry. Before I seemed to move on from this technique, I had also started firing small pieces in saggers that had pulverized charcoal and sometimes oxides mixed in and spread around the base of the enclosures to further effect the surface. Honestly like much of my testing over the years this was highly enjoyable having an idea and being able to put it into practice and reality to make this wonky "new" Shino come to life. 

(*As sure as the earth spins around the Sun,  am sure that someone out there is going to pre-date my testing and use of this glaze)

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