Modern Japanese Ceramics Pottery Contemporary
By Appointment is best. You might get lucky just popping by, but a great deal of the month I am out visiting artists or scouring up new items, so days in the gallery are limited.
All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Pottery : Contemporary item #1481134
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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The ultimate in crusty, a radical charred vessel by Kanzaki Shiho enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Iga Hanaire. Two sides are completely blackened and coated in Koge-charring. Opposite the darkness gives way to tombo-no-me (Dragonfly eyes) with thick encrustations around the base, a stream of yellow cascading down one clefted face. It is 21.5 cm (8-1/2 inches) tall and in excellent condition.
(Kanzaki Shiho (1942-2018) preferred firing his kiln for ten days, resulting in the rich textures and heavy ash deposits apparent on his work. He was born in Shigaraki, and was fast tracked into the Kansai University Law Department, but rather the life of a lawyer, after graduation he went with his heart to take up the precarious life of a potter, apprenticing under Mino artist Matsuyama Suketoshi. Later he returned to Shigaraki working there at the research center while developing his own style and methods with the Anagama. He consistently stayed with the personal world of private exhibitions, developing a large following both at home and abroad and his list of exhibitions is impressive. He has been the subject of several documentaries and Television interviews, and is widely published. For more information see, The Fire Artist, a documentary by Canadian Director Claude Gagnon.
All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Pottery : Contemporary item #1481190
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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A canonical misshapen Shigaraki Jar by legendary female artist Koyama Kiyoko enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Shigaraki Shizen-yu Uzukumaru. The igneous coating of mottled natural ash glaze containing clusters of charring gives testament to the fluctuations in temperature during the firing which give the work of this pioneering female artist such a unique quality. Here the form is classic medieval Shigaraki with a cross-work pattern called Higaki engraved into the shoulder of the jar. It is 21 cm (8-1/2 inches) tall and in excellent condition.
Koyama Kiyoko was the subject of the film Hi-Bi (2005) and the recent NHK television drama Scarlet. She is the preeminent pioneering female wood firing artist in Japan. Born in Sasebo, Nagasaki in 1938, she went to Shigaraki village, home of one of Japan’s Six Ancient Kilns. There she studied the traditional techniques, and bore the brunt of centuries of discrimination against women. Through it all she persevered to become one of the most highly sought of Shigaraki potters. For more on her works see Modern Japanese Ceramics in American Collections, Japan Society New York, 1993
All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Pottery : Contemporary item #1481234
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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A sculptural form covered in iconic Iga Kiln effects by Toyosaki Nobuhiko of the Korin-kiln in Mie prefecture enclosed in the original signed wooden box. On the convex shoulder, green glass pools crystalline, while a smattering of goma (sesame) ash clings to the bulbous side, gray charring and plenty of flying ash to fill in the blanks. It is 25 cm (10 inches) tall and in excellent condition.
Born in 1955, he graduated Kyoto’s Ritsumeikan University department of Science and Engineering in 1980 before enrolling in the Seto Ceramic Research Facility. In 1982 he moved to Toki City where he apprenticed under the Iga master Kishimoto Kennin. In 1988 he returned to his hometown, establishing his own kiln that same year. He has remained focused on private venues and the intimacy of the private exhibition.
All Items : Vintage Arts : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Stoneware : Pre 1980 item #1481527
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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An exquisite vase covered in rivulets of blue, yellow and green on a slightly flattened bottle form by Kiyomizu Rokubei VI enclosed in the original signed wooden box. The turned form has been slightly flattened creating four rounded sides, the resulting shape reminiscent of traditional Edo period green-glass bottles. Wide bands of blue mark th corners, with a narrow streak like a waterfall cascading between the ocher and jade on the sides. The vase is 30 cm (12 inches) tall, 16 cm (6 inches) diameter and in excellent condition.
Rokubei VI (Shotaro, 1901-1980) graduated from the Kyoto Municipal School of Arts and Crafts (Kyoto Shiritsu Bijutsu Kogei Gakko) and then Kyoto Municipal Special School of Painting (Kyoto Shiritsu E-ga Senmon Gakko) before taking a position under his father in 1925. That same year, he entered his first competition. Early on he was not limited to pottery, but worked in metal, sculpture and glass as well, absorbing aspects of modernism and the arts and crafts movement into his oeuvre. His career was to be marked by success in exhibitions including numerous awards at the aforementioned government sponsored Bunten/Teiten/Nitten National exhibitions and would later serve as a judge there. He enjoyed international acclaim, showing pieces at exhibitions, having his works join museum collections and winning awards in Belgium, the USSR, France and Italy. He did much to cultivate the arts and young artists in the post war years, taking full advantage of his position as a star to promote both traditional and avant-garde approaches. He would be appointed a member of the Japan Art Academy in 1962 and awarded the Order of Cultural Merit in 1976. So dedicated was he, in fact, he died in 1980 after collapsing at an exhibition celebrating the Kiyomizu family's history. A multitude of works by him are held in the The National Museums of Modern Art, both in Tokyo and Kyoto.
All Items : Artists : Glass : Contemporary item #1481533
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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Applied gold and colored glass decorate this Rimpa inspired yellow sake set by Kuroki Kuniaki enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Kinsai Korin Hisago (Applied Gold Korin Series Gourd). The flask is 11 cm (4-1/2 inches) tall, the cups 5 cm (2 inches) tall and all are in excellent condition, a superb and functional example of this important artists work.
Kuroki Kuniaki was born in Miyazaki prefecture in 1945. He began his career employed straight out of school by the Yamaya Glass Company in 1963. It would only be a decade later that he would venture out on his own, to begin creating unique works of glass art. Yet another ten years would pass before he went fully independent in 1984. He began with a project to revitalize Edo style Cut glass (Satsuma Kiriko), and established his workshop in 1989. He was awarded the National Order of Excellence for modern craft in 1991 and began to garner attention overseas. He was awarded in Paris in 1995, Rome in 1996 and Athens in 1997. Since he has been exhibited widely throughout Japan, as well as the US, Singapore, Throughout Europe, Taiwan, Australia among many others. His works have been collected by the Imperial Household Agency and the Royal Family. They are held in the collection of Philadelphia, Denmark Glass Museum, Peking Palace Museum and Kitazawa Museum among others.
All Items : Artists : Glass : Contemporary item #1481644
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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Do not let size fool you, this dainty work by Matsushima Iwao is flabbergasting, and will keep you wondering for days how he created it. It is core-formed glass, a process few have mastered, where variously colored rods, some infused with gold or other precious metals are heated and slowly built up over heat like forming a clay pot by coil and pinching (terribly oversimplified). According to the New Bedford Museum of Glass, “Long before the invention of the glass blow-pipe, which took place in the Roman Empire about 50 B.C., most hollow glass vessels were formed around a removable core”. This piece is roughly 6.5 cm (2-12 inches) diameter and comes complete with the original glass lid. Although traditional core-formed glass is at the basis of Matsushima’s work, he added significantly to the ancient technique; not merely imitating the ancient art, but refining and expanding it. Given the small size and fragility of his vessels, Matsushima does not sign them.
Matsushima Iwao was born in Okayama in 1946, and began delving into Core Glass forming in 1975. His work traveled the globe in 1981 as part of a show titled The Beauty of Modern Glass in 1981, the works visiting Australia, Canda and the US as well as being displayed at the National Museum of Modern Art in Kyoto (MOMAK). The following year he established his own studio and devoted himself fully to working professionally as a glass artist.
Works by the artist are held in the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York, the British Museum, and the Corning Glass Museum. In Japan three works by him are held in the National Crafts Museum, part of the National Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo (MOMAT). In addition, works are held in the Miho Museum, The Hokkaido Museum of Modern Art, and Toyama City Glass Museum among many others. He is now a lecturer at the Toyama City Institute of Glass Art and a faculty member at Okayama University, both in Japan.
All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Porcelain : Pre 2000 item #1481756 (stock #MC480)
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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A 12 sided bottle decorated with pomegranate by Living National Treasure Kondo Yuzo enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Zakuro Sometsuke Hyo-gata Bin (Gourd Shaped Blue and White Bottle with Pomegranate design). It is 21 cm (8-1/4 inches) tall and in excellent condition.
Kondo Yuzo (1902-1985) was born in the Gojozaka district of Kyoto and studied alongside Kawai Kanjiro and Hamada Shoji at the Kyoto Ceramics Research facility, where he studied kiln technique directly under Shoji. He then apprenticed under recently returned Tomimoto Kenkichi for three years before establishing himself as a unique artist in the Kiyomizu district of Kyoto in 1924. He served as a professor at the Kyoto University of Art where he helped shape generations of potters. After an illustrious career he was named a Living National Treasure for Sometsuke Porcelain in 1977. Works by the artist are held in the collection of the LACMA, Cleveland and Brooklyn Museums of Art, Kyoto Municipal and Tokyo National Museums of Modern Art among many others.
All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Porcelain : Pre 1980 item #1481757
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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The poetry of the ancient Chinese monke Hanshan spills over like blue rain down the sides of this porcelain vase by Living National Treasure Kondo Yuzo enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Kanzan-shi Sometsuke Kabin (Vase with blue and White Design of Cold Mountain Poem). It is 25.5 cm (10 inches) tall and in excellent condition. The poem reads:
On Cold Mountain, only white clouds come,
Don't accept the dust of the mundane world.
Our house has only a simple stool,
The full moon shines brightly over the mountain.
You can see the light blue pond from the window of the stone bed,
Deer and tigers often come to the pond.
Naturally, I came to aspire to a quiet life like this,
On Cold Mountain, a life away from the mundane world…
Kondo Yuzo (1902-1985) was born in the Gojozaka district of Kyoto and studied alongside Kawai Kanjiro and Hamada Shoji at the Kyoto Ceramics Research facility, where he studied kiln technique directly under Shoji. He then apprenticed under recently returned Tomimoto Kenkichi for three years before establishing himself as a unique artist in the Kiyomizu district of Kyoto in 1924. He served as a professor at the Kyoto University of Art where he helped shape generations of potters. After an illustrious career he was named a Living National Treasure for Sometsuke Porcelain in 1977. Works by the artist are held in the collection of the LACMA, Cleveland and Brooklyn Museums of Art, Kyoto Municipal and Tokyo National Museums of Modern Art among many others. According to Jaanus, Hanshan Shide, known in Japan as Kanzan, was a semi-legendary Tang dynasty, Zen (Chan) eccentric who is frequently depicted in Chinese and Japanese ink painting. Kanzan (lit. cold mountain) is thought to have lived as a poet-recluse near Mt. Tiantai (Jp:Tendai) in Zhejiang. The little that is known of his biography is provided in the preface to a collection of Kanzan's poetry, Kanzanshi Shishuu.
All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Pottery : Pre 2000 item #1482029
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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A Fabulous bowl by Living National Treasure Shimizu Uichi enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Seiji Deisai Chawan. The small bowl is Tabi-chawan size, made to be transportable for a picnic or some event. It is 10 cm (4 inches) diameter, 7.5 cm (3 inches) tall and in excellent condition.
Shimizu Uichi (1926-2004) was born in Kyoto the son of a ceramic dealer. Discarding the family business, he apprenticed in plastic arts under future Living National Treasure Ishiguro Munemaro. His work retains some principal elements of his teachers style while incorporating an understated elegance and avant-garde spirit of challenge uncommon for his time. He was first exhibited at the Nitten in 1951, receiving numerous awards there since. He also took the gold medal at the Prague International Exhibition, and was at the Brussels World Exposition. He is in the collection of the Tokyo National Museum, Kyoto Museum of Modern art, Clark Center and the Freer Gallery among many others.
All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Pottery : Contemporary item #1482103 (stock #MC306)
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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A colorful Guinomi Sake cup by Shibata Masamitsu enclosed in the original signed wooden box. The design, while technically perfect, is playful with soft colors which allow the viewer a childish sense of wonder. It is 6 cm diameter, 7.5 cm (3 inches) tall and in excellent condition, directly from the artist.
Shibata Masamitsu was born in Toki City, the heart of Mino country, in 1961. After graduating from Kyotos Ritsumeikan Daigaku University, He spent a year at the Tajimi Ceramics Research Facility. His work is an extension of his personality, a little quirky, a little cute, always colorful!
All Items : Artists : Glass : Pre 2000 item #1482120
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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A striking glass bowl which defies explanation by important female glass artist Iwata Itoko enclosed in the original singed wooden box. Made like the feathers of a peacock, each blue flourish contains a round bead of air marking the eye of the feather. Incredible! It is 15 cm (6 inches) diameter and in excellent condition. This is a rare opportunity to acquire one of her chawan, as she produced very few and only in the last years of her life.
Iwata Itoko (1922-2008), started working with glass after her marriage to Iwata Hisatoshi, Her works are free flowing ideas with a feminine sense against the backdrop of the international style she acquired while living abroad as a child accompanied with the cultural knowledge cultivated from her childhood. She was born into a privileged family, and from age 4-7 lived in London, very unusual for a Japanese of either sex in the roaring 20s. From 1935 she studied western oil painting under Arishima Ikuma, one of the top painters in Japan at the time. The next decade saw the devastation of war, survival, and the beginning of revival. In 1949 she married Iwata Hisatoshi, the eldest son and heir of the godfather of modern Japanese art-glass Iwata Toshichi. In the late 50s, after working to revive and support the foundry, she began her own line of glass lighting. In 1960 she designed a monumental glass wall for the Takanawa Grand Prince Hotel, which was so well received she was swamped with orders afterward. By the mid 60s she was operating her own glass line and designing glass furnishings, pushing the limits of the medium as well as delving deeply into the possibilities through personal research. In the latter half of her more than 50 years of production, she also challenged herself with tea utensils. In 1984 she sat on the International board of the Pilchuck Glass School, one of the most influential glass schools in the world. Her work is held in the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Corning Glass Museum, Denver Museum and Dusseldorf Museum among others. She was given the Lifetime Achievement Award in 19by the American Glass Art Society
All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Contemporary item #1482204
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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A striking configuration by the rising young female artist Tanaka Yoko enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Yu-un Hai (Playful Clouds Cup). Yoko has created a unique technique whereby she combines glass and porcelain. It is roughly 7.5 cm (3 inches) diameter and in perfect condition, directly from the artist this summer.
Tanaka Yoko was born in Kanagawa prefecture in 1983, and graduated the design course of Tama Art University in 2007. After working briefly, she enrolled in the Ceramics Lab of the Tajimi City Research center, graduating in 2011, following which she opened a studio in neighboring Toki city. Since her work has been exhibited at the National Ceramics Exhibition (Nihon Gendai Togeiten) and Kikuchi Biennale (Tomo Museum). She was awarded at the 2014 Mino International Ceramics Fair, 25th National Ceramics Exhibition and her work was taken into the Ibaraki Prefectural Ceramics Museum Collection in 2019.
All Items : Artists : Glass : Contemporary item #1482451
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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Heat shattered gold foil decorates the amber glass of this sake set by Yoshida Katsumi enclosed in the original signed wooden box. The Cups are 6.3 cm (2-1/2 inches) diameter, 3 cm tall. The pot is 21 x 17 x 17 cm (8-1/4 x 7 x 7 inches) and all are in excellent condition.
Yoshida Katsumi is a master craftsman born in Fukuoka Prefecture in 1938. He is well known for his tea utensils, including water pourers and sencha bowls. After being selected for the prefectural exhibition, he received high acclaim for his outstanding skills and delicate sensibilities.
All Items : Artists : Glass : Contemporary item #1482551
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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An agate-like cluster floats in the crystal glass of this large vessel by leading Japanese glass artist Hosoi Moto-o enclosed in the original signed wooden box. Ever inventive his works speak of the asymmetry and textures of the natural world. It is 43 cm (16-3/4 inches) tall and in excellent condition.
Hosoi Moto-o (Motoo) was born in Osaka in 1964, and both his older brother and sister also became glass artists. After creating a studio with his brother, he ventured out on his own. He has been exhibited and or awarded at the National Modern Crafts Exhibition, (Nihon Gendai Kogei-Ten) and the Nitten National Art exhibition among others. His dynamic glass works are based on the theme of nature and time.
All Items : Artists : Glass : Contemporary item #1482616
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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A striking work of heavy glass by Suzuki Genta enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Shizuku Kaki (Dripping Vase). Thick dollops of glass run like giant rain drops over the surface. It is 36 cm (14 inches) tall, and in excellent condition.
Suzuki Genta was born in Kyoto in 1971, graduating the prestigious Doshisha Universtiy in 1994. That same year he packed up and went off to Sweden where he studied at the Kosta Glass School, graduating in 1996. He then travelled Europe, learning under Philip Baldwin and Monica Guggisberg at the Verrerie de Nonfoux in Switzerland, then back to Sweden where he worked under Ulla Bostrom at the Aister Glass Studio, then Peter Kuchinke at the Lauscha Glass Factory in Germany. He studied for 8 months with Anders Wingard at the Baskemolla Glass Studio in Sweden in 1997, then went to New Zealand for six months under Ola Hoglund before 3 months under Simone Cenedese at Linera Vetro in Italy, returning to Japan in 1999. He established the Genta Glass Studio in Toyama prefecture in 2003 and has lived and worked there ever since.
All Items : Artists : Glass : Pre 2000 item #1482617
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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A small powerful work in clear glass covered in spiraling silver foil with a lid of opaque black by Ogawa Kaoru enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Ruri Koro. The piece is supported on three feet which seem to drip like black honey from the bottom while the same black crowns the six-sided form, rising in flutes to the finial. It is 13 cm (just over 5 inches) tall and in excellent condition.
Okawa Kaoru was born in Niigata in 1940 and graduated the design department of prestigious Tokyo Musashino Art School in 1964. A pioneering glass artist, works were exhibited in Europe and throughout Japan in the 1980s and 90s, receiving top prize at the first Tohoku Glass Art Exhibition in 1990 and again Top Prize at the 1st National Glass Art Exhibition in 1991. The artis then took a position as head of design for Hokuyo Glass in Aomori, famous for Tsugaru Vidoro Glass.
All Items : Artists : Glass : Contemporary item #1482618
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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A striking sake set by Okushima Keiji consisting of a glass Tokkuri embedded and a glass Guinomi sake cup mixed with porcelain and lacquered inside with silver leaf, each enclosed in their original signed wooden boxes. When I first saw his work, although made of glass, I had the impression that it was made by a potter, and Keiji attempts to bridge these mediums, with the addition of lacquer and gold/silver leaf, applied, baked, charred, to create art works never before seen. The Tokkuri is 15 cm (5-3/4 inches) tall, the cup 7 cm (3 inches) diameter and both are in perfect condition, directly from the artist.
Okushima Keiji was born in Kyoto in 1977, and raised in rural Shiga prefecture just over the mountains from his birthplace. In 2000 he graduated Ritsumeikan University, and entered the Toyama Garasu Zokei Kenkyusho Glass Research Facility, graduating there in 2002. After working in a glass studio for several years, he established his own studio in Shiga in 2010. Since he has focused on the world of private exhibitions as his preferred venue. That said, he has been accepted into the Glass Craft Triennale in 2010, the National Craft Exhibition (Nihon Kurafuto Ten) in 2011, and received the Iwata prize at the Tableware Taishoten in 2012. 2013 saw his work in display in the Lansing At Gallery (US) and in Korea where he would be seen again in 2014 and 2015. From 2016 to 2019 his list of exhibitions is impressive, including exhibitions throughout Japan as well as New York and Korea. Like many artists, he is now recovering from that three year blank left in all our lives by COVID.
All Items : Artists : Ceramics : Porcelain : Contemporary item #1482670
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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A large basin by legendary female porcelain artist Ono Hakuko, raw white porcelain decorated with golden flowers enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Kinrande Tsubaki Mon Hachi. It is 25 cm (10 inches) diameter, 11 cm (just more than 4 inches) tall an in excellent condition.
From Aichi prefecture, Ono Hakuko was trained by her father initially in the ceramic arts. However, she was most strongly influenced by the great experimentive artist Kato Hajime (1901-1968) and his work with gold. This affected her own style deeply, and it can be said that she carried on his research. She was awarded the JCS award in 1980, one of Japans most prestigious ceramics awards. In 1992 she was named an important cultural asset (Juyo mukei bunkazai) of Saga prefecture. Bucking the traditional image here is another of Japans great cultural assets who fought against a system of prejudice to rise to the top and it is an honor to be able to offer something by her. For more on this important modern artist see Touch Fire, contemporary Japanese Ceramics by Women Artists (2009)