Friday, March 6, 2026
E&G
Illustrated is what at first glance could be confused with
the somewhat ubiquitous Toruko-ao guinomi under a full moon by Kato Kenji but
in this instance, this is a less frequently encountered chawan. Over the years
I have seen quite a number of vase and varying guinomi forms but this is only
the second chawan that I have personally had the pleasure to handle. This particular
chawan is a natsu-wan, a summer chawan in Kato’s transparent soda blue style
with vivid, black decoration creating alternating panels around the bowls
interior and simple banding around the lip and exterior of the bowl. The glaze
stops abruptly short of the kodai showcasing the natural coloration of the reddish
clay which stands in a stark contrast to the blue though very complimentary. On
a rather personal note, I am rarely surprised by scale and volume but despite
measuring just shy of 14cm, this both has a compact and almost fragile
appearance. The low bowl does not contain “heaps” of volume but has an elegant
and graceful sensibility, quite diametrically opposed to your average Kumano
chawan, I must say. In the end, the proportions of this bowl are just classic
in nature, without the context, could it be a chawan or a guinomi, either way
it works quite well.
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