Moshi Moshi Monkey

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Nihon Mingeikan

Coolness--
with one cracked pot
my life alone

-Kobayashi Issa*

Last month I starting writing exhibition reviews for a great visual arts website here in Tokyo called tokyoartbeat. Below is my review of a show at the Japan Folk Crafts Museum.
Exquisite simplicity is the hallmark of the current exhibition, Soetsu Yanagi and Old Tamba Pottery, at the Nihon Mingeikan (Japan Folk Crafts Museum) through March 25th. Celebrating the 70th anniversary of the museum’s founding by Soetsu Yanagi (1889-1961), this exhibition represents a lovely subset of the craftwork shown throughout the space – a beautiful, traditional building of stone, stucco, tile, and wood. As originally conceived by Yanagi, the objects in the museum needed to be “…the work of anonymous craftsmen, produced by hand in quantities, inexpensive, to be used by the masses, functional in daily life, and representative of the region in which it was produced.” Yanagi, along with potters Hamada Shoji and Kawai Kanjiro formed the Mingei (folk art) movement in Japan during the 1920s. The museum’s collection includes pottery, textiles, metalwork, woodcarvings, bamboo work, and other traditional crafts. The approximately 200 Tamba pottery pieces in this show span the Medieval, Kamakura and Edo periods and vary in size from small containers, about 9 cm high, to large floor jars, up to 60 cm in height.
The main display of the pottery is in a large and open exhibition space on the second floor. Around the perimeter are a series of wooden and glass cases, often with a single piece per shelf and subtle, minimal lighting. The method of display corresponds perfectly with the austere quality of the work, which is simple, functional, elegant, and direct. The material totally and fully speaks for itself. A single criticism of the display is that so much of the work is behind glass. It is much harder to notice the subtle differences in this modest work when distracted by reflections. Also, though it is completely impractical in a museum setting, these pieces whisper to be picked up, touched and held – they seduce you. Created primarily as functional objects, the best experience of these pieces would be living with them every day.
Taken as a whole, Yanagi’s pottery collection exhibits a narrow range in terms of surface, color, and form, yet within that continuum there is a wealth of subtle variation. The illusion of simplicity melts away on closer inspection. Ash, iron and drip glazes produce complex surface layering. Colors are muted and earth-toned – rust, burnt umber, chocolate, putty - with hints of olive and moss green appearing now and then. If you take the time to view the pots from several angles, the light strikes the various layers, highlighting new colors. Following the less-is-more aesthetic of all the work in the museum, many pieces have a singular decorative element. One large, bucket-shaped form has a clay rope encircling the center of the pot ending in a simple knot in front, slightly off-center. Another jar has an incised, simplified rosette that utilizes the inherent curve of the figure. A few quick strokes of glaze create an abstracted shrimp on an elongated bottle form. Several pieces showcase a direct leaf imprint and are so delicate they are almost missed unless closely observed. Most pieces are functional jar forms, but again, within that narrow range there are endless subtle variations.

This work captures the wonderful paradox often found in traditional Japanese pottery of intentionally integrating flaws as an essential element. Accidental drips land in just the right spot and a jar lip curves asymmetrically in a way that seems destined. Though the pottery itself is modest, in keeping with the philosophy of the museum’s collection, the calm, reflective mood that a focused observation of it produces is profound. If you enjoy traditional Japanese craft, don’t miss this exhibition of old Tamba pottery - it is the perfect acknowledgement of the beauty of imperfection.

*translation from David G. Lanoue's Haiku Guy website

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