I enjoy the occasional snippets found in TV and movies regarding
pottery making. In Japan, the craft is explored in a wide array of jidai-geki,
chambara and normal TV programming as pottery is considered a noble and
essential pursuit to the Japanese. This short video, from SHIN-ZATOICHI, a TV
show that is about a blind traveling masseur, who is also a notorious swordsman
and yakuza member is just such a moment where Zatoichi has decided he wishes to
learn to make pottery chawan. The back story revolves around Zatoichi, over
hearing a transaction in which a contemporary chawan (circa 1850's) is sold for
ju-ryo (10 pieces of gold) and exorbitant sum, hence the interest in making
chawan. It is worth a watch for the blend of humor and sentiment between
Zatoichi, a student and the master. Enjoy!
Monday, April 1, 2013
Friday, March 29, 2013
FOUR SEASONS
The weather has finally changed here and it would seem that
spring has finally sprung. For the past three weeks, the Canadian geese have been
flying north, in small groups early on and through some blinding snow storms,
but now there are huge flocks, numbering into the thousands. Given this past
winter, I will not be at all sorry to see spring take hold in the Mohawk
Valley; it will be good to see green everywhere. After all, who doesn't like
green?
A friend recently sent me a jpeg of another Sato Katsuhiko
pottery piece. This one not thrown by Sato, is decorated on a white slipped body
and decorated in iron at the center in his ever familiar design of
Jizo-bosatsu. The hachi is then flanked by four bold and rich kanji; FUYU,
NATSU, HARU and AKI, the ideograms for winter, spring, summer and fall; the
four seasons. I am a huge fan of Sato's painted works, they are playful and direct,
spontaneous and insightful and immediately put me in mind of the cycle of
seasons which he has captured in such sparse and lyrical decoration.
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
INSIGHT
I have always know potters to both curious and insightful
and having very diverse experiences and approaches to both clay and life. It is
very rewarding to be able to glimpse into the experiences and insights of
another potter, especially one who is both a great potter and exceptional
teacher. Chris Staley, as Penn State Laureate, has put out a series of videos
on various topics that navigate around the world of both art and clay that
provide a unique look into how an artist in clay thinks as well as acts. To
date, there is quite a few of these videos that can be seen by perusing the attached
link and all are more than worth the time spent watching them and ;
http://www.youtube.com/user/ArtsandArch/videosMonday, March 25, 2013
MAKING CLAY UPDATE
I fired off the glaze kiln last week which included a group
of pots thrown from the clay I made up which I am calling CBSW5050. The
majority of pots in this clay were teabowls and yunomi and most of which were
fired using the latest version of Oribe (Oh9-12) glaze that I am using.
Illustrated is one of the variants from the group, paddled and with poured slip
under the Oribe glaze. I am constantly tinkering with various base glazes and
oxide/carbonate additions to get as many tones and textures of Oribe as
possible. I am happy with these particular results and will continue to push the
boundaries of the combinations and effects that it may produce.
If interested, you can see more photos of this chawan and a
yunomi glazed in this manner over on my Trocadero marketplace;
Friday, March 22, 2013
KAWAI STYLE
There are times when Kawai Kanjiro and his students create
pieces that are as much about the truth of form as anything else. When these
pieces are simply glazed with minimal decoration they speak about the essence
and basics of pottery that is the Kawai tradition. Perhaps it was his long
exposure and proximity to the master, but the works of Kawai Takeichi best
carry on the tradition of Kanjiro without being copies or clones of his teacher.
Illustrated is a well proportioned chawan by Kawai Takeichi; the bowl sits
wonderfully perched atop a characteristic Kawai school foot. The classic form
is decorated in a rich, yet simple banding of a tessha iron glaze which has run
ever so slightly adding movement and interest to the form. It is a simple bowl
made of simple clay and with simple decoration but the reality is that it is
anything but simple and presents the Kawai style at its very core.
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
ACALA
Illustrated is an eccentric chawan potted/painted by the
modern artist, Sato Katsuhiko (b.1940). Though best known for his 2-D
art work, Sato is multi-talented across a wide array of pursuits; paintings,
calligraphy, lacquer, pottery, glass and others, he imposes his will and vision
into each medium he works with. This chawan was loosely thrown and then
decorated in iron with the design of Fudo-myoo, the Immovable also known as
Acala. Sato is internationally recognized for his images of Fudo-myoo, among
others, and he has fit this decoration
well within the circular confines of the teabowl with temmoku glaze accents on
either side of the piece. Though Sato paints on a large number of premade
bisque pottery, both commercially and studio created, this chawan was thrown by
Katsuhiko and the manner in which the bowl was thrown, more than adequately
compliments his fast and folk style painting which he is so well known for.
Monday, March 18, 2013
MAKING CLAY
It gets very easy relying on clay, fresh out of the box, be
it terra cotta, stoneware or porcelain. In the case of my terra cotta, I have it
made for me by the clay professionals at Standard Ceramics in Pittsburgh. Over
the years I have made my fair share of clay including up to 600 pounds a day
while I was the tech assistant at Cleveland State. Since then, though most of
my clay is prepared clays, I have continued to make up small batches of varying
clays for a variety of uses and specific needs. The process I use is quite
simple; I measure out the ingredients in a 5 gallon bucket, mix it thoroughly
into a slurry consistency, pour it out on plaster to firm up and finish up the
process by vigorous wedging. All in all, not a terribly difficult undertaking
as long as I keep it under 25 pounds or so.
Last summer I made up a clay body that I wanted to fire slightly darker than the normal stoneware I work with for use with a new Oribe glaze I was testing. The darker body with more iron, tempers the green and makes for a richer looking surface. I fired several bowls from this clay and glaze combo and promptly sold all of them. About a month or so after selling one of the bowls, I was asked if I could make a mate to one of them and much to my chagrin, I realized, I had misplaced the test notes. I only recently found the notes to that particular conundrum and made up 20lbs of the clay and more of the Oribe as well. In a week or so, I should see if the pieces come out as they did before. I say this because I have taken explicit notes before and when trying to reproduce the results, the pots were just not the same. Most likely some variable that I over looked, but sometimes, inexplicably, the results are just not possible to reproduce, kismet maybe?
Friday, March 15, 2013
IDUS MARTII
"Beware the Ides of March", And so goes the
prophecy given to Julius Cesar and yet, he did not pay enough heed to the
augury of Spurrina on that fateful day of March 15th, 44BCE. He was
assassinated by the group, known as the Liberators, one of whose members was
Marcus Brutus a trusted ally and son of a former mistress. For all of his great
military genius and political acumen, in the end, it would seem, he did not
know whom to trust and who to stand sentinel against, his hubris may have been his
undoing.
I would also like to take the opportunity to wish any and all with even the wee bit-o-green in their being, a very Happy St. Patrick's day (3/17/20)!
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
SPOT
A friend sent this picture, entitled "spot" that I
found rather captivating. It is a simple picture of the interior of an Iga bowl
of a rich, deep bidoro pool that has accumulated at the lowest point of the
piece where the ash built up along the walls and during the firing ran and built
up in a centralized point. This natural occurrence is part of why I find both
Iga and Shigaraki so fascinating and though this effect can be artificially
created, it is rarely done so in such a convincing and serendipitous manner.
"The ignorant man marvels at the exceptional; the wise
man marvels at the common; the greatest wonder of all is the regularity of
nature." George Dana Boardman (1828-1903)
Monday, March 11, 2013
INCOMING VII
There is an unmistakable elegance and beauty to well done
celadon. The wide variety of colors, crackle patterns, kannyu style and depth
makes celadon of infinite interest and perpetually conversant with the viewer.
There are a number of potters who come to mind when I think about modern Japanese
celadon, but few shine as brightly as the versatile and varied, Uraguchi
Masayuki (b.1964). Uraguchi is practically a household name when it comes to a
plethora of celadon styles, he was fortunate to be the singular student of the
late Ningen Kokuho, Miura Koheiji and his works are part Miura, part Okabe
Mineo and yet entirely his own thing. His creations of both classic
traditionalism and architectonic sculptural vessels has paved his way to a
brilliant future and even the potential for one day rising to the heights of
his master, Ningen Kokuho.
On Friday, I had a package arrive with two wonderful
Uraguchi Masayuki pots, one a classic beishokuji influenced chawan and the
other an illustrated rinka style serving bowl, both are exhibition pieces. They were sent here so that I could sell them
for their current owner who is continuing to down-size and fine tune his
collection but due to a slight family emergency, I have been a bit slow in getting
them put up on my Trocadero marketplace. I will add additional description to
the two offerings in the coming days.
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