Large Cream and Brown Plate
Sakamoto Shigeki Japanese
Not on view
Sakamoto Shigeki hosted Bernard Leach and Yanagi Sōetsu when they "discovered" the pottery village of Onta and spent time there in the 1960s, documenting and writing about its Mingei pottery. This tiny village sits deep in a forest in Oita Prefecture (northwest of Tokyo). Eleven families have been making traditional folk pottery there for the past 300 years. In 1995 the Japanese government declared the entire village to be an Intangible Cultural Property.
A Korean potter named Sakamoto was among the founders of the Onta kiln in the mid-17th century, not long after Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1536–1598) invaded Korea and seized craftsmen during the "pottery wars" (1592–1596). Slipware pottery is characterized by its primary decorating process of placing dipping, painting, or splashing slip onto the leather-hard clay vessels before firing. That tradition has been continued on this large, cream and brown Onta ware plate.
This image cannot be enlarged, viewed at full screen, or downloaded.
This artwork is meant to be viewed from right to left. Scroll left to view more.