The are very
few pots so elemental and imbued with an absolute physical presence as that of
wood-fired pottery where the nearly endless and varying landscapes effects
paint a picture in fire and ash. Though not fired to the excess of some modern
pieces, this exceptional mimitsuki hanaire (lugged flower vase) by the
twentieth-century master Konishi Heinai II shows off a sense of seasoned
nobility where restraint and just the right touch bring the clay to life. In
its creation, a duality has been born, a stark contrast exists between its
faces and the reverse is locked in where you witness the raw and unapologetic
narrative of a Momoyama-inspired vision brought to life.
The surface of this hanaire is a simple
lesson in the wabi-sabi aesthetic, the front facade presents an asymmetric
landscape of scorched clay, vertical scoring lines, and trails of natural ash
glaze that runs down its flank, simple and evocative in its presentation. It
would be quite difficult to mistake this vase as passive pottery; it is a
lively conversation and active confrontation with the fire. The flared and
dramatic mouth is cloaked in an array of effects from matt, smokey charcoal to
a richer, wetter green ash pointing to the all-natural accumulation
characteristic of intense wood firings. As you turn your attention around the
pot the transition reveals the build-up of ash on one side versus the dry, charcoal
scorched planes on the other, embodying a sense of unrefined, timeless decay
that celebrates imperfection, impermanence, and the simple integrity of the
medium with what I think of as slightly ominous undertones.
In the historical vocabulary of Iga-yaki,
the mimitsuki or attached "ears" (lugs) are far from mere
ornamentation they reflect a certain expected nobility in Iga-yaki.
Historically rooted in Iga’s past, these prominent, hand-sculpted lugs, though
just a vestige of their original actual function, add a visible, structural
balance to the form and serve to anchor the vessel’s posture as well as break
up the verticality of the pot. These aesthetic additions provide a structural
counterweight to the often heavily distorted, paddled and gently manipulated
cylindrical nature of the piece coordinating with the neck, mouth and lip to
give these pieces their iconic, architectural silhouette.
Without these lugs, many Iga vase
forms risks losing their distinct attitude and some measure of its identity;
they frame the vessel’s torso, break up any uniformity and help spotlight its
deliberate, hand-altered asymmetry. Drawing on his master’s instruction and
centuries of established and well-known Iga archetypes, Konishi Heinai II
understood that these elements must be entirely natural and feel deeply
integrated, acting as extensions forged directly from the core rather than mere
contrived afterthoughts and additions. Ultimately, Heinai II was committed to
keeping medieval traditions alive, approaching the kiln with a mindset that
valued historical archetypes while demanding a visceral, textured finish, form
and presence. This hanaire stands as a testament to that philosophy—a powerful
work that commands attention through sheer physical presence and its look back
into the past.
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