Glazed Pots by Heian Tofukuji, Part Two.

13.5 x 9.8 x 5.3 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

A pair of green glazed pots with blue highlights, two pots in which the later influence of Tofukuji on potters such as Aiba Kouichiro(Kouyo) and Ino Shukuho can clearly be seen.

15.8 x 10.8 x 3.5 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

A blue glazed rectangle with a similiar glaze to the round in the previous post. This pot simultaneously calls to my mind blue flames and running water in a spring brook, an interesting contradiction.

17.8 x 3.5 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

An interesting multicolor glazed round with cut feet and a marvelous patina.

13.5 x 12.3 x 3.5 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

A light blue green glazed oval pot with cut feet.

6.4 x 14.2 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

A tall cascade style with Kiri Bako(kiri wood storage box).

11 x 6.6 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

A multicolored glazed small round, resembling the multicolored glazed pots of contemporay potter Bunzan.
13.7 x 8.9 x 4.6 cm.  Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

A squat blue green glazed square with cut feet.  This is a body style of pot common to Tofukuji, often seen glazed with darker blues, the lighter blue green glaze here is a little less common.

14.2 x 10 x 4 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

Another green glazed pot with silver and blue glazed highlights where Tofukuji’s influence on contemporary potter Ino Shukuho can clearly be seen, as in the next picture.

Ino Shukuhou Copyright Yorozuen

20.3 x 16 x 5 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

A metallic grey green glazed oval with a marvelous patina.

18.4 x 14.6 x 5 cm Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

A deep blue oval, with cloud feet.  This is the most common blue glaze seen in Tofukuji pots.  A marvelous deep indigo.

Hope you have enjoyed these first two posts dealing with the glazed pots of Tofukuji.  In the next post I’ll be showing off a few more pots from my own collection, then on to the unglazed pots and Hanko of Tofukuji.

Posted in Famous and Antique Potters | 3 Comments

Glazed Pots by Heian Tofukuji

Among the many well known Japanese potters of the late 19th and early 20th century, no potters’ work is more varied, in size, shape, glaze, colour, and clay than Heian Tofukuji. In addition to high quality and great usability, it is this variety that makes Tofukuji such a well regarded potter, but it is this selfsame variety that makes good forgeries sometimes difficult to identify. Unlike many potters, who specialize in a particular type of pot, glazed or unglazed, or particular glazes or clay bodies, the works of Tofukuji are excellent across all fields of bonsai pottery. If we look closely at the pots of Tofukuji, we can see that other potters have made their signature pots based on the duplication of a single Tofukuji glaze, while the styles of his pots are ubiquitously duplicated.

Originally a comb maker, when his job was eliminated, fairly late in life, Tofukuji decided to become a professional bonsai potter. The use of the local public kiln, and the kilns of friends and fellow potters at first, necessitated the smaller pots that, only decades after his death, became so valuable when Shohin Bonsai overtook larger sized bonsai in popularity. One need just glance through a Gafu Ten album to see that in most years, 1 of every 25 pots is a Tofukuji, 1st or 2nd generation, while in some as many as 1 in 10!
Here and in the next post we will look at 20 glazed pots by Tofukuji, from the collected pots of Yorozuen.
Thanks once again to Yorozuen for allowing me to use these images.

12 x 11.2 x 4.9 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

An interesting green glazed round with a blue glaze highlight.  Many potters use blue highlights on green or oribe pots, the signature glaze from Kouyo uses this technique.  This pot calls to my mind the image of waterfall, a cooling effect, perfect for display of this pot in summer.

11.2 x 7 x 2.9 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

Thick Green glaze with silver overglaze speckles, marvelous patina, and cut feet.  Many famous Japanese potters publically espouse the influence of Tofukuji on their own styles, and if I was told this was made by one of three of them, Ino Shukuho, Aiba Kouchihira(Kouyo), or Watanabe Kazuhiro(Ikkou), I wouldnt doubt it for a second.

10.3 x 8.4 x 5 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

An interesting light glazed pot with grey and blue mottling and highlight features.  This pot evokes the image of a thinly clouded moonlit night sky in Spring for me, like an abstract or impressionist painting.

17.2 x 3.6 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

Metallic green glaze on hand formed round with 3 cut feet.  A very thick glaze(common in Tofukuji glazes) that would be perfect for an informal and feminine Azalea, to my mind.

27 x 6.5 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

Tofukuji is famous for his blues.  No potter brings more depth and richness to varying shades of blue, with the possible exception of Kouzan.  This white underglazed pot with light blue overglaze and cloud feet is light in appearence, like a clear brook on a Summers day, perfect for display in the season.

10.2 x 8.3 x 2.4 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

A light green oval,  simple in style, shown here to illustrate the patina.  The pots of Tofukuji often have a single placed spot on the underside or inside, perhaps to test the viscosity and adherence of the glaze, or, as the fellow collector who showed me this thinks is possible, that he knew exactly how important these spots would become.  Hidden from the daily stresses of dirt, water, fertilizer…these spots, like the drips in the glaze of the above pot, show little to no patina after years of use.  So it is possible from these spots and drips to tell the original color of the glaze.  Here, one can see that this pot was a very light green, and see the darkening of the glaze over time.

13.2 x 10.2 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

A deep indigo pot with strong, clean lines, softened slightly by the feminine feet and rounding of the glaze.  Deep, rich color to this glaze, an excellent darker blue.

11 x 8 x 3.5 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

Another darker blue, with a completely different feel and style to the one above.  Clean, strong lines and cut feet make this a strong pot to me.  The glaze is once again deep and rich, but in a completely different style and thickness to the pot above.

17.2 x 13.6 x 4.5 cm. Copyright Yorozuen

Copyright Yorozuen

Light green glazed drum with rusticly placed nailheads and darker green brown overglaze.  Heian Kousen was one of a couple of potters who publicly proclaimed the influence of Tofukuji on his work in the early 1970s, on television doing bonsai pot demonstrations.  From there began the rise of Tofukuji pots in popularity, and price!  One pot dealer goes so far as to say that we never would have heard of Tofukuji or Kouzan if it were not for Heian Kousen!  One can see the influence of Tofukuji easily in Kousen drum pots, they are clearly homages to pots like this one.

17.6 x 3.5 cm. Copyright Yorozuen.

Copyright Yorozuen

A very thick green glazed pot with a marvelous patina, and perhaps darker green brown overglaze.  This pot evokes the image of the fresh green of Spring emerging from the long brown Winter, for me.(As a bonsai guy, this is an image I never mind having evoked!)

In the next post I will present 10 more Tofukuji glazed pots.  Thanks for reading, hope you enjoy these pots as much as I do.

Posted in Famous and Antique Potters | 1 Comment

A Few Pots From my Collection

Hello all,

To start off this blog, Id like to show a few pots from my collection from some of the Japanese potters we’ll be featuring here in the coming months. I must apologize for my mediocre photography, collecting pots is nothing new to me…photographing them is.

Heian Tofukuji 1st Generation, 3.5 by 2"

Tofukuji Sr, Hanko

I like this pot a lot.  Excellent patina where the glaze meets the clay toward the bottom, as well as in the crazing and flaws in the glaze.  Clear, undamaged chop.  Nearly seamless joining of the simple hand pressed cut feet.  All in all, a good example of the pottery of Tokufuji Sr., a potter whom we will be featuring extensively in the coming months.

Heian Tofukuji 2nd Generation, 3" by 3"

Heian Tofukuji 2nd Generation, other side

This pot is one of my current favorites in my collection. A Heian Tofukuji 2nd generation homage pot, hand formed with cut feet. This pot features all of the Hanko used by Tofukuji, both first and 2nd generation, made with the original stamps. Not only interesting as a collection piece, the pot is a kind of Rosetta stone of Tofukuji Hanko…given the many forgeries out there, this is dead useful!

Heian Tokufuji 2nd Generation, 4" by 2"

Tofukuji Jr, Hanko


Another 2nd Generation Tofukuji small pot. Used with a Trachelospermum in Gafu Ten 31(page 136 of the album), I like this hand formed pot for a couple of reasons. The glaze is well applied, and clear. The color is nice, a darker blue that contrasts nicely with Bonsai with darker green shades to their leaves, or trunks. A nice patina is beginning to form as well.

Wakamitsu Aiso, 3" by 2" by 1"


A pot by Aiso, a late 19th and early 20th century potter. The Hanko on this pot is severely damaged, and it was only through multiple rubbings and measurement comparisons of the chop, along with matching the glaze(which is quite unique) and clay to other pots by Aiso that it was positively identified. I love the thick glaze with its unique colours, which creates soft lines on what would otherwise be a masculine shape.

Heian Kouzan, 3" by 2.5"

Heian Kouzan, Hanko

A post war pot by Heian Kouzan. As fellow collector and friend Matt Ouwinga originally taught me, post war pots by Kouzan are made with an orange clay, while the clay body in pre war pots is white. I like the clean lines of the feet and the body of this pot, as well as the mild green glaze.

In future posts I will show and discuss the work of these potters and many others in more depth, featuring examples from American and Japanese collectors, as well as the collected pots of Yorozu-en, a fantastic Japanese Bonsai Nursery, whose masters, Hukano Shigeru and Hukano Ayumu are the Union Director and Executive Director of the Japanese Asscociation for Bonsai Pieces(pots and bowls). I thank both of them, along with Fukano Akatsuki, deeply for the privilege of using the images of the bonsai pottery they have bought and sold through the years to further knowledge here in the States.

Posted in My Personal Collection | 3 Comments

A New Blog

Hello Everyone.
Welcome to my new blog about bonsai, and more specifically, Japanese and Antique Chinese Bonsai Pots.
My name is Ryan Bell and I’ve been collecting pots and bonsai for a few years, and feel that more could certainly be said on the subject.
In the coming months I will feature both well known and lesser known Japanese bonsai potters, from many regions of Japan, along with antique Chinese pots and some pots from my own collection and the collections of other Americans.
I really love these pots, and hope to share that love with you all.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment