Blue-Green Ofuke Pouring Chawan

Katō Hiroshige (Kasen Kiln)
★★★★★ (2)
Regular price $112.00
Description

This slightly distorted Ofukei spouted chawan was designed and produced as a collaboration between Tezumi and Hiroshige Katō of Kasen Kiln. Each bowl was hand-thrown and then manually distorted into a delightfully playful gourd shape before being glazed in the traditional Ofukei (御深井) style unique to Akazu-yaki. The ofukei glaze on this chawan consists of a base layer of a feldspar-rich ash glaze which fires into a celadon-esque green with beautiful crazing. The deep blue comes from gosu (呉須), a cobalt oxide-rich pigment traditionally used in blue-and-white porcelain.

Specifications

Made in Japan. Ships from the United States.

Width: 16 cm (6.3 in)
Height: 8.1 cm (3.2 in)
Capacity: 350 ml

Please note that due to the organic nature of hand-carving, glazing, and painting, there are variations between pieces, with each bowl being unique in shape and design.

Akazu-yaki (赤津焼), from Akazu in Aichi Prefecture, is often seen as merely a subset of Seto-yaki, however Akazu is one of the oldest pottery sites in the region was also the official kiln site for the Tokugawa family in Nagoya castle, with Akazu potters also firing wares in the castle garden. Many of the styles associated with Mino-yaki were originally developed in Akazu. The turmoils of the Sengoku Era caused potters to flee the Seto region over the mountains to Mino. Today, the Akazu traditions are upheld by roughly a dozen potters.

Ofukei/Ofuke (御深井) is a glaze style that originates with Akazu-yaki. Four families of Akazu potters were recruited by the Owari Branch of the Tokugawa Shogunate to produce ceramics to be used by them in Nagoya Castle. The kiln site was set up north of the castle in an area called Ofukei-maru, giving these wares their name. The glaze used is a mix of ash and feldspar, which turns a pale green-blue when fired in reduction. While this style was brought back to Mino and Seto, Akazu is its homeland. Of the original four families, only Katō Hiroshige’s still produces pottery, making his Ofukei work all the more special.

Ofukei wares are often decorated with gosu (呉須), a cobalt oxide-rich pigment more famously used in blue-and-white porcelain.

ofukei

Katō Hiroshige (加藤裕重) is a 14th generation potter, and the 12th head of Kitagama Kasen (喜多窯 霞仙), based in the Akazu hills in Seto. In the early Edo period, his family was one of four protected by the Tokugawa Shogunate in order to fire tea ceremony utensils for Nagoya Castle. These Oniwa-yaki (garden fired) wares for the Nagoya Tokugawa developed into a style called Ofukei (御深井). His family's kiln is the only remaining of those original four. Katō-san specializes in traditional Mino and Seto styles such as Shino and Oribe, as well as the Akazu-yaki speciality of Ofuke. In addition, Hiroshige-san loves developing new styles and pursuing his own unique artistic expression.

Katō-san specializes in traditional Mino and Seto styles such as Shino and Oribe, as well as the Akazu-yaki speciality of Ofukei. In addition, Katō-san loves developing new styles and pursuing his own unique artistic expression.

Katō Hiroshige from Kasen Kiln working with clay

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