Friday, December 5, 2025

SPIRIT

When I first saw this large and bold mizusashi, the sheer sculptural qualities were inescapable though at the same time it had a real organic presence, the spirit, like some weather and water formed stone in a river bed. This imposing Hagi mizusashi was made by Kaneta Masanao using his kurinuki method of starting with a large hunk of clay and methodically hollowing or carving out the form from the inside. Once finished, this mizusashi was glazed over in a Shira-Hagi glaze which in this case has blushed to a pink tone in just all the right spots and the surface has thinned ever so slightly on the high points and areas of sharp, carved line to further define the form and its motion. Though I have seen a lot of Masanao’s mizusashi forms, this one spoke to me, it is conversant at a number of levels and also qualifies somewhat as fantastical and animated in its execution where the tapering form, elegant blushing, rich carved lines and the appearance of what appears to be sprouting wings on either side breathe life into the clay making which on most days would be a great pot and turning it into a true work of wonder where concept, creativity and technique have all conspired for unencumbered success.  

“Where the spirit does not work with the hand, there is no art.”  Leonardo da Vinci