Friday, July 25, 2025

ANTICIPATION

Almost two decades ago I saw my first Sue-Bizen pot buy Yoshimoto Shuho only to find out it was already taken but at some level, collecting is about patience and “strategery” as Will Farrell (imitating George Bush) would say. The biggest problem was that my first encounter was with a dramatic and feudal piece that was a rather high bar to exceed. Then after quite some time, flash forward, having seen quite a number of Yoshimoto’s pots, I finally found a piece that had the same degree of surface, Sue-Bizen atmosphere and feudal inspiration and by sheer happenstance it had a lid, a perfect mizusashi.      

Illustrated is the Sueki inspired Bizen mizusashi by Yoshimoto Shuho, squared in form, each plane of the body is a series of deep, rustic carved channels or furrows that surround and encase the piece while the top of the pot is recessed a bit and completed with a lid cut from the clay of the pot itself. The surface is a series of colors, all washed over in a thin coating of natural ash giving the impression that this is more an Iga pot than a Bizen one but rest assured it has all of the tell-tale characteristic of early, wet Sueki ware and Sue-Bizen in particular. The surface varies from blue-grey, to light tan and greens and where the ash has built up in the ridges of the pot, there is small pools of ash, all crazed and doing its best to imitate bidoro effects. It was a long time waiting on what I considered the perfect replacement for the Yoshimoto Shuho vase all those years ago but when you combine the anticipation, the potter, a firing and a covered pot, it was certainly worth the wait. 

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