Suruga Yamasyou

In today’s post we will take a look at the carved pots of Suruga Yamasyou. Yamasyou is one of the most respected makers of carved pots in Japan, and his works fetch correspondingly high prices!
Born March 4, 1925, Yamasyou began full fledged production of bonsai pots in 1975. He is now deceased. He was a bonsai enthusiast for many years before beginning pottery. He is Known for excellent burnishing, lacquering, and finishing techniques, as well as carvings and small statues. Relief work consists primarily of Frog pots, but dragons and crabs are also abundant. Has influenced many modern potters, notably Masahi Furumoto.

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What can be said about this pot!? Pictures pretty much say it all! Intricate, surreal carvings, fine finish to the rich red clay. Truly demonic!

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Now for something completely different! A mellow crab pot with etched design. Crab pots typify the bulk of Yamasyou’s work. The finish to the unglazed clay of this pot is very fine.

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Back to the demonic side of Yamasyou! This carved dragon pot is exquisite, but it’s hard to imagine a bonsai that could hold up to this!

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Another carved dragon pot with intricately detailed carving. I especially like the work on the rim, which is rare for Yamasyou.

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Another crab pot with an especially nice woven basket design.

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Animal reliefs are another Yamasyou specialty, I think I’ve seen about every animal imaginable. Literally, Lions, Tigers, and bears.

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A much less demonic dragon.

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A small figure relief.

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And last of all, the most demonic carving yet! I love the centering of the face, as if it’s coming toward the viewer, and I have a special fondness for quince shaped pots(if you couldn’t tell!)
I hope you’ve enjoyed seeing a few pots from master carver Suruga Yamasyou. Til next time!

Posted in Modern Potters | 3 Comments

Bijutsu Bonki!

I’ve been looking for this book set for over a year(at a reasonable price!) and this week the copies I picked up arrived. Published by the Nippon Bonsai Association in 1990 as a commemorative of an event, the two volume super deluxe set is entitled
“美術盆器:名品大成” which is “Bijutsu Bonki:Meihon Taisei”(forgive the translation if it’s incorrect!) or, in English “Beautiful Artworks of Pots and Vessels: Noteworthy Pieces of Distinction”.
These are super fantastic and really live up to their “super deluxe” billing: hard slipcovers, gold embossed cloth bindings….and they’re huge!

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With hand for scale! 15″ by 11″.
The books are divided into famous pieces from China and Japan, and both contain appendices with Hanko and Rakkan from the pieces pictured throughout. Additionally, both books feature sections on famous Suiban, and Volume 2 also contains sections on noteworthy stands and tenpai.

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Japanese Chops

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A few Tofukuji(upper right hand corner….droool…)

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Ne-Shoku(root stands)

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Antique Chinese Chops

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Antique Chinese Pots and a couple of pretty decent 😉 junipers that have appeared in them.
If you have a chance(and the funds!)to pick up this set, I highly recommend it. Tough to find at a reasonable price though, as one acquaintance told me a while ago, they’re “rarer than hen’s teeth”! Indeed!

Posted in Famous and Antique Potters, Modern Potters, Pot Info, ID, Hanko, Books, ect. | Leave a comment

Finally…Itou Gekkou

Itou Gekkou is one of my favorite painters, and these days he’s one of my favorite potters as well. Gekkou comes from a very long line of fantastic potters, of bonsai ware and other items, and I find the story of his progression to today most interesting.

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Itou Gekkou was born May 22, 1939. His Parents, Itou Shikou and Itou Tankyou, both professional bonsai potters, seem to have identified their sons’ unique talents from an early age. In 1959, Gekkou began painting sometsuke pots, many made by his brother, Itou Tonyo, local renowned potters, or parents.
While in the beginning many of his pots were made by Tonyo, Bikoh, and others, in the last 30 years Gekkou has developed into an amazing potter in his own right, as well as painter, though Tonyo may still be the better clay-man for his technical excellence.
Gekkou was heavily influenced by the detailed paintings of Tsukinowa Yusen.
All of his paintings are done freehand, no stencil or patterns like some painters use. His line and painting techniques have become much more refined in the last decade, and stand up as excellent beside work by any contemporary pottery painter. His techniques are as varied as can be, including sometsuke, red paintings, overglaze enamels, and go-sai(5 color).
Enjoy some pieces by one of the most popular contemporary painters of bonsai pottery!

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A 6″ oval sometsuke from my collection. Ive showed this pot before and its up on the For Sale page. Fine details and brushwork, and clear directionality. The landscape wraps around the entire pot.

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Another of mine. Indigo glazed rectangle pot with red window landscape. The glaze separation between the porcelain and the blue is clean, with no blurring, and the red landscape is well done. An earlier piece than the previous, as can be seen by the higher quality of brushwork in the first pot.

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A five color round from the collection of good friend and fellow collector Matt Ouwinga of Kaede Bonsai-En. I helped his fiancé pick this one out for him for Christmas…who wouldn’t want to find this under the tree! Awesome brushwork and really strong, overglaze enamel painting. Really impressive!

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Another from Matt’s collection. This pot was used in Kokufu Ten. Nice patina, early work by the look of the brushwork. Dating porcelain is a tough matter, as it patinates at a tenth the rate of typical glazes and clay types, but this one looks to be at least 30 years old from the brushwork and patina.

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One more from Matty O’s shelves. Really nice fluted oval landscape.
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And the original box and Turmeric cloth for storage. These are tough to find!!

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This one is super cool. One of 3 collaboration pieces I have seen between Gekkou and Kamiya Ryuen. Really cool 5-color painting. Calls to my mind some of the ornately painted and decorated unglazed antique Chinese pots I’ve seen.

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From the four sides.

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Two cut indent lotus shapes, one in red and one in blue. These are very recent work, you can really see the tight brushwork and detail in both pots.

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Taller cascade or semicascade blue with landscape window and arabesque bordering. A little busy for my taste, but still elegant.

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Another glazed blue with red window landscape. I really love the cloud shape to the window, it really softens up the pot.

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Taller cascade sometsuke with a great landscape.

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A really nice 4 footed oval go-sai with dragons. Really nice use of the 5 colors, and great detailing to the feet and rim.

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A soft rectangular 5 color with landscape scene. Really nice brushwork to this more recent pot.

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A really cool, and older, round painted in blacks and grays. This is a really unique pot with a nice patina. Muted colors like this one are rare.

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A taller cascade piece with a winter scene. I’ve said it before, but it’s still surprising to me that winter scenes aren’t more common, given that it’s the best time to veiw deciduous trees and both the Kokufu and Gafu Tens are held in the dead of winter!

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An earlier work collaboration piece from Gekkou and his brother, Itou Tonyo. Nice round window with a bird peeking out from the intricate decorative painting. This motif is common to Pottery paintings, and always reminds me of MC Escher.

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A very spartan lakeside landscape with watering swans or egrets. Plenty of negative space and directionality here. Very elegant and classy.

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A very tiny pot! But the details are great. I imagine this was painted using brushes of only a few hairs!

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A photo from the other side with a lighter for scale. Tiny!

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A really unique orchid pot with overglaze enamel painting. Haven’t seen too many of these, they must be rare!

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Another round with geometric bordering to a landscape window.

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From all four angles.

I hope you’ve enjoyed seeing this selection of pots from master painter Itou Gekkou. Til the next post! More from my collection, including pots by Heian Kouzan, Heian Kouso, and some antique Chinese!

Posted in Famous and Antique Potters, Modern Potters, My Personal Collection | Leave a comment

New Links Page Up

I finally managed to begin posting links to sites that I frequent and recommend highly, you’ll find it at the top menu bar.
It includes both western and eastern sites about bonsai, pottery, and general tree info. I still have a bunch more to list, as I’d like it to be a pretty comprehensive resource.
If you have any suggestions, or would like me to drop a link to your site, feel free to drop me a line at
Gastrognome at aol dot com
In the interim, here’s some pretty pots!

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A great Bushuan I picked up and am waiting breathlessly for delivery! Love that swirling red!

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A really cool yellow crackle made by Furumoto, at the Bushuan kiln. I’m not sure what the deal with these is. Furumoto has been making tiny glazed pots with frogs and animals perched on them at his own kiln for a while, then all of a sudden these larger pots started appearing bearing Furumoto stamps, stating that they came from the Bushuan kiln. Not sure if they’re working together, or if Fukuda San has taken him as an apprentice of some sort, or what. Perhaps one of my Japanese readers can clarify!
Anyway, I picked up several, in different colors, more on that later….

Posted in Famous and Antique Potters, Modern Potters, Pot Info, ID, Hanko, Books, ect., Trees | Leave a comment

Kamiya Ryuen pots and process

When I first started researching pots, 3 or 4 years ago, before I even had a collection, I happened upon a website showing the process Kamiya Ryuen used to make his pots. I believe the website was “Ryuen.com” although I don’t really remember, as the next time I went back to the site, a week or two later, it was gone. Turns out Ryuen passed away in that time, and the site was removed. I thought all that info was lost to me, until last week, when Joe Morgan-Payler, who writes the excellent Australian “Nichigo” blog and “Bonsai in Japan” photo blog, both of which youll find on my links page, emailed me these photos showing Ryuen’s process of single block carving. This makes for a much more sound pot, more frost resistance, and more resistance to breaking and chipping. Enjoy these photos of what goes into making a masterpiece of unglazed pottery! If you’re interested, I have a few Ryuens for sale on the “For Sale” page. Many thanks to Joe for these awesome photos!

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Posted in Modern Potters, My Personal Collection | 2 Comments

Next Book:The Hatanaka

I am about halfway through the Hatanaka pottery book, and posted the keys to the Japanese potters on the new page. If you have the book, it’s now a lot more useful! If you dont, get it! Hatanaka San was one of the most varied and famous collectors in Japan. In the 90’s, much of his collection was destroyed during an earthquake. Theres a heartbreaking picture in the back of him, that always stuck with me, sitting on a table in his pottery room surrounded by the shards of what appears to be an antique Chinese Pot.

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Japanese Pottery Book Key

I’ve had the 5 easily acquired Japanese multiple potter books for quite awhile now, but other than as “pottery porn” their usefulness to some degree is negligible. I’m sure many others of you have these same books and would agree.
At the request of my German friend Heike Van Gunst, I’ve undertaken the task of identifying the potters and translating the names in them and will feature the keys on the blog and in a new page titled “Pottery Book Keys”. I hope everyone finds this useful, I learned a lot just making up the keys!
If you don’t have the books, and would like to acquire them, they can be ordered from Yoshoen at
http://bonsai.ocnk.net/product-list/8

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The first book to be keyed is this one, featuring only the work of potters who make small pots, and will be up this afternoon.
Enjoy, and thanks for reading!

Posted in Famous and Antique Potters, Modern Potters, Pot Info, ID, Hanko, Books, ect. | Leave a comment

New Pots up For Sale

New pots up for sale on the “For Sale” page. I’ll be adding pots all week, so check back.

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Posted in Modern Potters, My Personal Collection | 1 Comment

Miyazaki Isseki

In the last post, we looked at pots from Tsukinowa Yusen, the master of brush and detail. In today’s post, we’ll take a look at Isseki, the master of negative space and elegance.
Miyazaki Isseki was born in Osaka in 1920 and lived until 1984. He specialized in tea pottery and other wares, but in 1965 begin making some small bonsai pots. His works are very rare, and prices are reflectively very high.

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We’ll start off with this highly detailed red painted pot I looked at before in the “Famous Painters” post. Great brushwork to this piece, and fine use of detail. The use of negative space in the river winding away from the viewer creates a great sense of depth and perspective.

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A totally different go-sai(5 color) pot with much less detail and more negative space than the last. For some reason, I’m reminded of the famous Sidney Opera House when I look at this pot, with it’s unique triangle architecture and bridge in the background. Very few elements and details with a great amount of negative space combine in this painting to form a cohesive landscape. Very elegant and understated, it feels almost expressionistic or cubist to me.

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A more detailed sometsuke with very dark blue, and great sense of depth from the negative space of the overhanging cliff to the left.

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A square or diamond shaped red pot with some very nice detailed brushwork and elegant space. The porcelain glaze on this pot appears very thick, rounding off what may be otherwise sharp edges.

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Another red painting with a spartan landscape at the foot of the mountain. I love the lone tree slightly right of center at the foot of the temple. Stark.

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Another very spartan red painting. This landscape, with it’s lone weeping willow and boater, feels a little sad to me. Would go very will with a spartan tree.

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Another red with really nice, intricate details. Great patina on this piece.

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A six sided pot blue with a lone hermit. This pot popped up for sale a month or two ago and was a fraction the cost of other Isseki, due to the gaps in the glaze you can see in the upper right.

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Another Red with interesting use of space. The individual elements are all a bit separated, the trees to the right, the mountains in the upper left, as if seen emerging from a fog.

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Another view of the same red from two different sides. You can see this interesting use of space between individual elements.

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A cartoonishly colored go-sai with a nice patina beginning to form. Even through the patina, the bright colors still pop.

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Another red with a greatly detailed boat and fisherman casting his net. I love the detail of the individual leaves of the reeds or bamboo to either side, and the balance created by the different amounts.

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And we’ll finish up today’s post on Miyazaki Isseki with an elegant blue with great negative space to the left, and the same separation of the elements as seen in the red above.

I hope you’ve enjoyed looking at a few pots from Isseki! Up next: More pots from my collection!

Posted in Famous and Antique Potters | 5 Comments

Tsukinowas!

Settle in, this ones going to take a minute!
Of all the painters of bonsai pots in the 20th century, none is more famous and highly regarded than Tsukinowa Yusen. While many bonsai enthusiasts are familiar with Yusen, his successors: Tsukinowa Shunseki and Tsukinowa Shousen, are less known and appreciated. Today we’ll take a look at pots from all three generations of the Tsukinowa lineage.
Tsukinowa Yusen lived from 1908 to 1998. At a young age, he moved to Kyoto to study and paint ceramics. He was forced to do hard labor during World War 2, and as a result was in poor health much of the rest of his life. Bonsai was a hobby, and in 1961 he began making pots for his own trees, and as a hobby. Like many other painters of ceramics, some of his best works are copies of famous old paintings, such as Ando’s “53 Stations”.

Tsukinowa Shunseki lived from 1931-2006. I’ve seen very few examples of his work, and even the pottery books show only a relative few. His work is not near that of his father, and is relatively inexpensive in comparison.

Tsukinowa Shousen was born in 1960. He truly embodies the spirit and skill of his Grandfather, with the same attention to detail, marvelous brushwork, and quality ceramic work.
Because of the extremely high value and relative scarcity of Yusen pots, many forgeries exist. The only ones I’ve seen are pretty clear, it’s much more difficult to imitate Yusen’s extremely skillful painting than, say, a glaze color or a clay type, as in some very well done forgeries of Tofukuji and Heian Kouzan. Because of the forgeries of his grandfathers work, all Shousens come with a certificate of authenticity, stamped and signed box, and stamped and signed turmeric cloth.

In the future I’ll do posts on each potter individually, but here’s a brief(…) introduction to the lineage.
Now, on to the Pots!
Yusen

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We’ll start off with the rarest and the priciest! Yellow window pots like this from Yusen are few, and VERY expensive, as only a handful exist. Great patina, and note the great feet and ceramic work, clean, flawless. No drip to the window, or blurring. Yusen was nearly as great a potter as painter, a true rarity.

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A red painted round porcelain pot, showing some nice patina on the rim. Porcelain patinates at a fraction of the rate of other glazes and unglazed clay, so porcelain pots showing patina are much more valuable and tough to find. This pot is a prime example of why Yusen’s work is prized. Note the detailed brushwork, the full wraparound landscape, the flawless porcelain…gorgeous.

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A five color painted landscape, with tall feet. This pot style is common to Yusen pots, and often seen holding lovely deciduous semi-cascades and cascades in the Gafu-Ten shows. Again, marvelous detailed landscape, really great ceramic work.

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Another go-sai pot to contrast with the previous piece. No feet to speak of, and much softer lines to the pot all around…how cool is that? The pot is softer, more feminine, and the painting mirrors that change precisely! Softer lines and brushwork, more negative space, softer details…wow.

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A Yusen Suiban with blue landscape. Great use of negative space, flawless porcelain. I have no clue how many of these exist…less than a handful I’m sure, as this is the only one I’ve seen.

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Another red with great brushwork and details. Less negative space here, needs a busy tree to compliment it.

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A simple pot with the tall feet common to Yusen pots. Great details and brushwork.
We’re not finished by Yusen by any means, there will be more to come!
As a footnote to Yusen, we should mention the paintings of Seifu Yohei. Yohei was a contemporary of Yusens who painted many pots made by Yusen for him. Here are a couple of examples.

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We’ll look at Yohei’s work in more detail in another post. Suffice to say, it’s easy to see why Yohei wanted Yusen blanks…his ceramic work is excellent in these pots!

Shunseki
I only have 2 pots archived to show you Shunseki’s work. As indicated above, they’re simply not that great.

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This one shows some good geometric and character work.

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A gold and red painted pot. Nice detail to the kids, but the pot looks a little wonky.
Shousen

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A sometsuke blue from the third generation Tsukinowa. You can clearly see the grandfathers influence in the fine brush style, full wraparound landscape, and great ceramic work on this pot.

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A red painted pot based on famous old anthropomorphic paintings of animals. Super fine brush work, really pretty, fun, and playful.

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A five color pot with a very nice hollow footed base. A spartan winter scene brightened up considerably by the foot painting and rim. An interesting and hopeful contrast.

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A wonderful winter scene sometsuke. To me, it just feels cold and spartan, evoking the season perfectly. The top photo shows the various accoutrements that come with each Shousen pot. As I’ve indicated in previous posts, winter scene painted pots are hard to come by, which always seemed strange to me, as the most important shows are in winter…the best painters of the current generation, Haruyoshi, Ranzan, Joshu Syouzan, and Shousen, seem to have realized this as well, and I see more winter scenes from them than previous generations. Now if somebody in the United States would actually HAVE a show in winter(or at the very least an appropriate time…August in Chicago…really?). Well then we’d be taking a huge step forward!

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Two great reds with totally different styles of pots and brushwork. The oval is, interestingly, painted more heavily than the rectangle, and while the rectangle is the stronger pot based upon shape alone, the painting makes the overall balance softer and more feminine, the oval becomes almost as strong as the rectangle. An interesting contrast.

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And we’ll finish up with Shousen today with a round, showing two different views that would suit totally different trees. The first view needs a very strong tree, while the second, with more negative space, could suit much more elegant trees.

Hope you’ve enjoyed seeing this overview of the Tsukinowa Line. As soon as I find the photos, and the time, I’ll post on these potters in more depth(winter?).
Next up, Miyazaki Isseki. While Yusen is the master of the brush, Isseki is the master of the no-brush, that is to say, the master of negative space.
Thanks for reading, I DO appreciate it when you subscribe and comment, my favorite thing about this research and writing about it is meeting the others interested, so….post a comment! Subscribe!

Posted in Famous and Antique Potters, Modern Potters | 2 Comments