Joan B Mirviss LTD company logo
Joan B Mirviss LTD
Skip to main content
  • Menu
  • Exhibitions
  • Artworks
  • Artists
  • Publications
  • Videos
  • News
  • About
  • Search
Menu
  • Current
  • Upcoming
  • Past

Asia Week New York 2026: Six Celestials: Tomimoto, Ishiguro, Kawai, Kamoda, Okabe, & Tanaka S

Current exhibition
12 March - 24 April 2026
  • Google calendar
  • Download iCal
  • Outlook calendar
  • Artworks
  • Catalogue Introduction
  • Download Press Release

  • For Asia Week New York this coming March, Joan B Mirviss LTD, in collaboration with Shibuya Kurodatoen, Co., LTD, presents Six Celestials, an exhibition featuring masterpieces by six artists whose seminal careers established the foundations of contemporary Japanese clay art. By placing their diverse bodies of work in conversation, the exhibition highlights the ways in which each of these twentieth-century icons helped pave the way for the emergence of Japanese ceramics as it exists today—one of the most dynamic and exciting fields of contemporary art.

     

    Born as the nineteenth century drew to a close, three of the artists in this exhibition played critical roles ushering Japanese clay into the twentieth century. As the founder of the ceramics department at Kyoto City University of Arts and longtime professor, Tomimoto Kenkichi (1886-1963) was a fierce advocate of individuality, a trait that is captured in his own elegantly formed and decorated porcelain vessels as well as in the diverse body of work that has been produced by his many students. The work of Ishiguro Munemaro (1893-1968) is bold and undeniably modern even as it was rooted in the ancient Chinese techniques that he dedicated his life to researching. In contrast with these contemporaries of his, both of whom were designated with the prestigious title of Living National Treasure for their work, Kawai Kanjirō (1890-1966) held true to the spirit of the Mingei (folk art) Movement he helped pioneer by eschewing official honors or recognition for his undisputed mastery of historical glazes.

     

    As representatives of the next generation, the remaining three artists of this exhibition developed their ceramic legacies in the second half of the twentieth century. Though he studied the historical glazes of Shino, Oribe, and celadon, Okabe Mineo (1919-1990) breathed new life into these traditions with his innovative and entirely unique forms. With his ever-evolving palette of glazes, patterns, and forms, Kamoda Shōji (1933-1983) created some of the most evocative and sought-after works of the twentieth century. Finally, Tanaka Sajirō (b. 1937) continues to hone his skills in the art of wood-firing with natural glazes to create vibrant and contemporary works inspired by the historical tradition of Karatsu wares.

     

    This exhibition features more than forty masterpieces equally distributed between these six artists, many of which have been exhibited and published in Japan. Works by these luminaries can be found in the collections of prominent museums worldwide, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY; Art Institute of Chicago, IL; National Museum of Asian Art, Washington, D.C.; National Museums of Modern Art, Kyoto and Tokyo; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Musée Tomo, Tokyo; Victoria & Albert Museum, London; and Minneapolis Institute of Art, MN.

     

    Six Celestials opens on March 19 and runs through April.

    The gallery is open to visitors weekdays, 11am to 6pm and by appointment.

    Opening March 19, 2026, as part of Asia Week New York

    Opening Party: March 19, 2026, 5pm–8pm

    For Asia Week New York, we will also have special weekend hours: 

    Saturday, March 21 (11am to 6pm)

    Sunday, March 22 (12pm to 5pm)

  • Artworks

    • TOMIMOTO KENKICHI, Iro-e (enamel overglaze) incense burner with geometric polychrome diamond-shaped designs and perforated metal lid, 1949
      Artworks

      TOMIMOTO KENKICHI

      Iro-e (enamel overglaze) incense burner with geometric polychrome diamond-shaped designs and perforated metal lid, 1949
      Glazed porcelain; metal cover
      3 1/8 x 3 3/4 in.
      Potter’s mark: 富 (Tomi) painted on bottom
      Box title: 色繪 香爐 (Iroe kōro); Polychrome Overglazed Incense Burner
      Box signature: 富本憲吉造 (Tomimoto Kenkichi zou); Created by Tomimoto Kenkichi
      Box seal: 富 (Tomi)
    • TOMIMOTO KENKICHI, Faceted white porcelain vessel with narrow, upraised neck, 1932
      Artworks

      TOMIMOTO KENKICHI

      Faceted white porcelain vessel with narrow, upraised neck, 1932
      White glazed porcelain
      8 3/8 x 8 3/8 in.
      Potter’s mark: 富 (Tomi) painted on bottom
      Box title: 白磁八角壷 (Hakuji hakkaku tsubo); White Porcelain Octagonal Vessel
      Box signature:
      千九百三拾弍年新春 (Senkyūhyakusanjūninen shinshun); 1932 Early Spring
      富本憲吉造 (Tomimoto Kenkichi zou); Made by Tomimoto Kenkichi
      Box seal: 富 (Tomi)
    • TOMIMOTO KENKICHI, Iro-e (enamel overglaze) hexagonal covered box with landscape motif of “Rain on the Yamato River”, 1960
      Artworks

      TOMIMOTO KENKICHI

      Iro-e (enamel overglaze) hexagonal covered box with landscape motif of “Rain on the Yamato River”, 1960
      Glazed stoneware, metal
      4 3/4 x 4 3/4 x 4 1/4 in.
      Potter’s mark: 富 (Tomi) painted on bottom
      Box title: 色繪 大和川急雨 六角飾箱 (Iroe Yamatogawa kyūu rokkaku kazaribako);
      Polychrome Overglazed Hexagonal Covered Box with Decoration of Rain Shower on the Yamato River
      Note: 大和川(the Yamato River) is located in Ando village, Nara Prefecture where Tomimoto was born.
      Box signature: 富本憲吉造 (Tomimoto Kenkichi zou); Created by Tomimoto Kenkichi
      Box seal: 富 (Tomi)
    • TOMIMOTO KENKICHI, Large round white vessel with raised, wide mouth, 1940
      Artworks

      TOMIMOTO KENKICHI

      Large round white vessel with raised, wide mouth, 1940
      Glazed porcelain
      10 1/8 x 13 1/4 in.
      Potter’s mark: 富 (Tomi) painted on bottom
      Box title:
      紀元二千六百年 仲秋 (Kigen nisenroppyaku nen chūshū); August in 1940
      Box signature: 富本憲吉造 (Tomimoto Kenkichi zou); Made by Tomimoto Kenkichi
      Box seal: 富 (Tomi)
    • TOMIMOTO KENKICHI, Rounded white vessel with slightly slanted shoulders and short, raised mouth, 1942
      Artworks

      TOMIMOTO KENKICHI

      Rounded white vessel with slightly slanted shoulders and short, raised mouth, 1942
      Glazed porcelain
      7 3/4 x 9 3/8 in.
      Potter’s mark: 富 (Tomi) painted on bottom
      Box title: 白磁壷 (Hakujiko); White Porcelain Vessel
      Box signature: 富本憲吉造 (Tomimoto Kenkichi zou); Created by Tomimoto Kenkichi
      Box seal: 富 (Tomi)
    • TOMIMOTO KENKICHI, Iro-e (enamel overglaze) slightly recessed rounded square platter with foliated rim, sarasatic-patterned four-petaled floral patterning, 1936
      Artworks

      TOMIMOTO KENKICHI

      Iro-e (enamel overglaze) slightly recessed rounded square platter with foliated rim, sarasatic-patterned four-petaled floral patterning, 1936
      Glazed Kutani porcelain
      2 x 11 1/4 x 11 1/4 in.
      Potter’s mark: 富 (Tomi) painted on bottom
      Box title: 色繪更紗風角鉢 (Iroe sarasafū kakubachi); Polychrome Enamel Overglazed Square Bowl with Sarasa-style Decoration
      初めて九谷の素地を用ひ 東京に於いて試みたる 色絵家宝 (Hajimete Kutani no soji o mochii Tokyo ni oite kokoromitaru iroe kahō);
      Polychrome enamel overglazed family treasure created as an initial experiment in Tokyo using Kutani porcelain
      Box signature: 富本憲吉造 (Tomimoto Kenkichi zou); Created by Tomimoto Kenkichi
      Box seal: 富 (Tomi)
    • KAWAI KANJIRŌ, Red copper-glazed, lobed, covered box with floral design, ca. 1950
      Artworks

      KAWAI KANJIRŌ

      Red copper-glazed, lobed, covered box with floral design, ca. 1950
      Glazed stoneware
      7 1/2 x 8 1/4 in.
      Box title: 辰砂食籠 (Shinsha jikirō); Red Copper-Glazed Covered Box
      Box signature: 寛 (Kan)
      Box seal: 河井寛之印 (Kawai Kan no in); Kawai Kan’s seal
    • KAWAI KANJIRŌ, Rectangular box with matching cover decorated with abstract floral design, late 1940s
      Artworks

      KAWAI KANJIRŌ

      Rectangular box with matching cover decorated with abstract floral design, late 1940s
      Glazed stoneware
      5 5/8 x 8 1/2 x 5 7/8 in.
      Box title: 寛二郎作 飴釉塗分喰籠 (Kanjirō saku ameyū nuriwake jikirō); Made by Kanjirō, Yellowish-brown Glazed Box
      Box signature: 河井紅苑識 (Kawai Kōha shiki); Authenticated by Kawai Kōha (Kawai Kanjirō’s granddaughter)
      Box seal: 河井寛印 (Kawai Kan no in); Kawai Kan’s seal
    • KAWAI KANJIRŌ, Black barrel-shaped vessel with splashed patterning in red and green, ca. 1960
      Artworks

      KAWAI KANJIRŌ

      Black barrel-shaped vessel with splashed patterning in red and green, ca. 1960
      Glazed stoneware
      7 1/2 x 8 1/2 x 5 in.
      Box title: 黒扁壺 赤青 (Kurohenko sekisei); Black Flattened Vessel with Red and Blue
      Box signature: 寛 (Kan)
      Box seal: 河井寛之印 (Kawai Kan no in); Kawai Kan's seal
    • KAWAI KANJIRŌ, Flattened wide rectangular vessel with raised mouth decorated with sançai glazing, ca. 1960
      Artworks

      KAWAI KANJIRŌ

      Flattened wide rectangular vessel with raised mouth decorated with sançai glazing, ca. 1960
      Glazed stoneware
      8 1/4 x 10 1/2 x 5 1/4 in.
      Box title: 寛次郎作三色扁壷 (Kanjirō saku sanshoku henko); Three-colored Flattened Vessel Created by Kanjirō
      Box signature: 河井敏孝識 (Kawai Toshitaka shiki); Authenticated by Kawai Toshitaka, director of the Kawai Kanjirō's House Museum and artist's grandson
    • KAWAI KANJIRŌ, Cobalt-glazed (gosu) flattened circular vessel with raised rectangular mouth and carved decoration, ca. 1950s-60s
      Artworks

      KAWAI KANJIRŌ

      Cobalt-glazed (gosu) flattened circular vessel with raised rectangular mouth and carved decoration, ca. 1950s-60s
      Glazed stoneware
      10 1/8 x 7 7/8 x 5 1/8 in.
      Box title: 呉洲扁壺泥刷毛目 (Gosu henko doro hakeme); Cobalt Glazed Flattened Vessel with Brushed Slip
      Box signature: 寛 (Kan)
      Box seal: 河井寛之印 (Kawai Kan no in); Kawai Kanjirō's seal
    • KAWAI KANJIRŌ, Iron-glazed covered box with stylized floral motif on lid, ca. 1930
      Artworks

      KAWAI KANJIRŌ

      Iron-glazed covered box with stylized floral motif on lid, ca. 1930
      Glazed stoneware
      2 3/4 x 3 3/8 in.
      Box title: 鐡藥壺 (Tetsuyaku tsubo); Iron-glazed vessel
      Box signature: 寛 (Kan)
      Box seal: 河井寛之印 (Kawai Kan no in); Kawai Kan's seal
    • KAWAI KANJIRŌ, Flattened round vessel with circular floral motif, 1934
      Artworks

      KAWAI KANJIRŌ

      Flattened round vessel with circular floral motif, 1934
      Glazed stoneware
      9 7/8 x 8 x 7 1/2 in.
      Box title: 草花文圗扁壺 (Sōkamonzu henko); Flattened Vessel with Flower and Plant Patterning
      Box signature: 寛 (Kan)
      Box seal: 河井寛之印 (Kawai Kan no in); Kawai Kan's seal
      Note: Also includes handwritten documents by Kawai Toshitaka, director of the Kawai Kanjirō's House Museum and artist's grandson, dated to June 25, 1972
    • KAWAI KANJIRŌ, Black teabowl with raised foot and masked phoenix and dragon motifs, ca. 1938
      Artworks

      KAWAI KANJIRŌ

      Black teabowl with raised foot and masked phoenix and dragon motifs, ca. 1938
      Glazed stoneware
      3 3/8 x 5 3/4 in.
      Box title: 鵬龍文黒釉茶盌 (Hōryū mon kokuyū chawan); Black Teabowl with Phoenix and Dragon Motif
      Box signature: 河井寛次郎先生御作 棟方志功記 (Kawai Kanjirō sensei on saku Munakata Shikō shirusu); Work made by Kawai Kanjirō, inscription by Munakata Shikō
    • KAWAI KANJIRŌ, Flattened rectangular vessel with raised mouth decorated with sançai glazing, ca. 1960
      Artworks

      KAWAI KANJIRŌ

      Flattened rectangular vessel with raised mouth decorated with sançai glazing, ca. 1960
      Glazed stoneware
      8 1/2 x 7 3/4 x 4 in.
      Box title: 三色扁壺 (Sanshoku henko); Three-color Glazed Flattened Vessel
      Box signature: 寛 (Kan)
      Box seal: 河井寛印 (Kawai Kan no in); Kawai Kan's seal
    • KAWAI KANJIRŌ, Square lidded container with green glaze and raised flower motif, ca. 1962
      Artworks

      KAWAI KANJIRŌ

      Square lidded container with green glaze and raised flower motif, ca. 1962
      Glazed stoneware
      3 1/8 x 3 3/8 x 2 in.
      Box title: 花盒子 (Hana gōsu); Covered Container with Flower Motif
      Box signature: 寛 (Kan)
      Box seal: 河井寛之印 (Kawai Kan no in); Kawai Kan's seal
    • KAWAI KANJIRŌ, Tapering covered jar with squared-off sides and matching round lid in namako ("sea cucumber") glaze, 1930s
      Artworks

      KAWAI KANJIRŌ

      Tapering covered jar with squared-off sides and matching round lid in namako ("sea cucumber") glaze, 1930s
      Glazed stoneware
      5 1/8 x 4 1/2 in.
      Box title: 海鼠壷 (Namako tsubo); Sea Cucumber Vessel
      Box signature: 寛 (Kan)
      Box seal: 河井寛之印 (Kawai Kan no in); Kawai Kan’s seal
    • ISHIGURO MUNEMARO, Low, open teabowl with raised foot and yellow brushstroke (hakeme) patterning, ca. 1955
      Artworks

      ISHIGURO MUNEMARO

      Low, open teabowl with raised foot and yellow brushstroke (hakeme) patterning, ca. 1955
      Glazed stoneware
      2 5/8 x 5 1/2 in.
      Box title: 黄刷毛目 盌 (Ki-hakeme wan); Teabowl with Yellow Brushstroke Patterning
      Box signature: 栩 (Ku)
      Box seal: 栩 (Ku)
    • ISHIGURO MUNEMARO, Ovoid vessel incised with Chinese poem, 1936
      Artworks

      ISHIGURO MUNEMARO

      Ovoid vessel incised with Chinese poem, 1936
      Glazed stoneware
      8 1/8 x 7 5/8 in.
      Box title: 黒華壷 (Kokka tsubo); Black Glazed Vessel
      太極圖説刻文 (Taikyoku-to setsu kokubun); Inscribed with text from Taijitu shuo
      八瀬初窯 (Yase shōyō); First firing in the Yase kiln
      Box seal: 宗麿造 (Munemaro-zō); Made by Munemaro
      Note: Inscribed on this vessel is an excerpt from "Taijitu shuo" 太極圖說 by Northern Song philosopher, Zhou Dunyi 周敦頤. This text explains the origin of the cosmos as emerging from the shifting energies of yin and yang in the form of stillness and movement respectively. From this duality emerges the five elements, which in turn give rise to the ten-thousand beings.
    • ISHIGURO MUNEMARO, Large persimmon tenmoku-glazed bowl, ca. 1942-1947
      Artworks

      ISHIGURO MUNEMARO

      Large persimmon tenmoku-glazed bowl, ca. 1942-1947
      Glazed stoneware
      2 3/8 x 12 in.
      Box title: 柿釉鉢 (Kakiyū bachi); Persimmon Glazed Bowl
      Box signature: 栩 (Ku); Munemaro’s pseudonym
      Box seal: 栩菴 (Kuan)
    • ISHIGURO MUNEMARO, Teabowl with sharkskin texture, titled Abundant Rice Fields (Hyakumangoku), ca. 1957
      Artworks

      ISHIGURO MUNEMARO

      Teabowl with sharkskin texture, titled Abundant Rice Fields (Hyakumangoku), ca. 1957
      Glazed stoneware
      3 3/8 x 6 1/2 in.
      Box title: 梅華皮盌 (Kairagi wan); Teabowl with Shark Skin Texture
      百萬石 (Hyakumangoku); Abundant Rice Fields
      Box signature: 栩 (Ku); Munemaro’s pseudonym
      栩庵題 (Kuandai)
      Box seal: 栩 (Ku); Munemaro’s pseudonym
    • ISHIGURO MUNEMARO, Small cylindrical vessel with black rope-patterning design on white ground, Late 1940s-50s
      Artworks

      ISHIGURO MUNEMARO

      Small cylindrical vessel with black rope-patterning design on white ground, Late 1940s-50s
      Glazed stoneware
      4 7/8 x 3 1/4 in.
      Box title: 小壺 (Kotsubo); Small Vessel
      Box signature:栩 (Ku) (Munemaro’s pseudonym)
      Box seal: 八瀬窯宗麿 (Yase-gama Munemaro)
    • ISHIGURO MUNEMARO, Conical vessel patterned in iron-oxide brushed design over green celadon glaze, ca. 1967
      Artworks

      ISHIGURO MUNEMARO

      Conical vessel patterned in iron-oxide brushed design over green celadon glaze, ca. 1967
      Glazed stoneware
      6 7/8 x 5 7/8 in.
      Box title: ⻘瓷紅彩壷 (Seiji kōsai tsubo); Celadon Red-glazed Vessel
      Box signature: 栩翁S (Kuō S)
    • ISHIGURO MUNEMARO, Teabowl with partridge-feather glaze, ca. 1956-1961
      Artworks

      ISHIGURO MUNEMARO

      Teabowl with partridge-feather glaze, ca. 1956-1961
      Glazed stoneware
      3 1/2 x 5 x 4 3/8 in.
      Box title: 鵲鴣斑盌 (Shakohan wan); Teabowl with Partridge Feather Pattern
      Box signature: 栩翁S
      Box seal: 栩 (Ku); Munemaro’s pseudonym
    • ISHIGURO MUNEMARO, Circular platter with motif of three dancing women, ca. 1948-1950
      Artworks

      ISHIGURO MUNEMARO

      Circular platter with motif of three dancing women, ca. 1948-1950
      Glazed stoneware
      3 x 13 3/4 in.
      Plain wooden box
    • ISHIGURO MUNEMARO, Platter with motif of cricket and grasses in iron underglaze, ca. 1964–1966
      Artworks

      ISHIGURO MUNEMARO

      Platter with motif of cricket and grasses in iron underglaze, ca. 1964–1966
      Glazed stoneware
      2 1/2 x 12 in.
      Box title: 銕絵草虫文皿 (Tetsue sōchūmon sara); Iron-glazed Platter with Insects and Plants
      Box signature: 栩翁S
      Box seal: 栩 (Ku); Munemaro’s pseudonym
    • OKABE MINEO, Ko-Seto ash-glazed shouldered vessel with incised abstract curvilinear motifs, 1971
      Artworks

      OKABE MINEO

      Ko-Seto ash-glazed shouldered vessel with incised abstract curvilinear motifs, 1971
      Glazed stoneware
      16 x 9 3/4 in.
      Potter's mark: Artist's mark incised on bottom
      Box title: 古瀬戸瓶子 (Koseto heishi); Koseto-style Vessel
      Box signature: 嶺男 (Mineo)
      Box seal: 嶺男 (Mineo)
    • OKABE MINEO, E-Shino-glazed round teabowl with iron-oxide underglaze patterning, 1962
      Artworks

      OKABE MINEO

      E-Shino-glazed round teabowl with iron-oxide underglaze patterning, 1962
      Glazed stoneware
      3 5/8 x 5 1/2 x 5 1/8 in.
      Potter's mark: Artist's mark incised on bottom
      Box title: 絵志野茶碗 (E-shino chawan): Painted Shino-glazed Teabowl
      Box signature: 嶺男 (Mineo)
      Box seal: 嶺 (Mine)
    • OKABE MINEO, Rounded E-shino vessel with lattice patterning, ca. 1960
      Artworks

      OKABE MINEO

      Rounded E-shino vessel with lattice patterning, ca. 1960
      Glazed stoneware
      6 x 9 in.
      Box title: 絵志野壺 (E-shino tsubo); Painted Shino-glazed Vessel
      Box signature: 嶺 (Mine)
      Box seal: 嶺 (Mine)
    • OKABE MINEO, Shino and Oribe-glazed rectangular platter with four feet, 1965
      Artworks

      OKABE MINEO

      Shino and Oribe-glazed rectangular platter with four feet, 1965
      Glazed Stoneware
      2 5/8 x 11 3/4 x 9 3/4 in.
      Box title: 志野織部角皿 (Shino Oribe kakuara); Square Platter with Shino and Oribe Glaze
      Box signature: 嶺男 (Mineo)
      Box seal: 嶺 (Mine)
    • OKABE MINEO, Oribe-glazed round waterjar with carved banding and matching circular cover, ca. 1964
      Artworks

      OKABE MINEO

      Oribe-glazed round waterjar with carved banding and matching circular cover, ca. 1964
      Glazed stoneware
      6 x 6 1/4 x 6 in.
      Potter's mark: Artist's mark incised on bottom
      Box title: 青織部水指 (Ao Oribe mizusashi); Blue Oribe Glazed Waterjar
      Box signature: 嶺男 (Mineo)
      Box seal: 嶺 (Mine)
    • OKABE MINEO, Ash-glazed columnar vessel with irregular carved banding, 1963
      Artworks

      OKABE MINEO

      Ash-glazed columnar vessel with irregular carved banding, 1963
      Glazed stoneware
      10 3/8 x 4 1/2 in.
      Potter's mark: Artist's mark incised on bottom
      Box title: 灰釉切立花生 (Haiyū kiritate hanaire); Ash-glazed Vertical Flower Vessel
      Box signature: 嶺男 (Mineo)
      Box seal: 嶺 (Mine)
    • OKABE MINEO, Funseiji fulling block (kinuta)-shaped vessel with pale blue craquelure celadon glaze, ca. 1969
      Artworks

      OKABE MINEO

      Funseiji fulling block (kinuta)-shaped vessel with pale blue craquelure celadon glaze, ca. 1969
      Glazed stoneware
      9 7/8 x 6 1/8 in.
      Box title: 粉青瓷砧 (Funseiji kinuta); Celadon Glazed Kinuta-shaped Vessel
      Box signature: 嶺男 (Mineo)
      Box seal: 嶺男 (Mineo)
    • OKABE MINEO, Tall Oribe-glazed columnar vessel with irregular carved bands, 1967
      Artworks

      OKABE MINEO

      Tall Oribe-glazed columnar vessel with irregular carved bands, 1967
      Glazed stoneware with original kintsugi repair by artist
      18 1/2 x 7 1/4 in.
      Potter's mark: Artist's mark incised on bottom
      Box title: 織部大筒 (Oribe ōzutsu); Oribe Large Cylinder
      Box signature: 嶺男 (Mineo)
      Box seal: 嶺男 (Mineo)
    • OKABE MINEO, Oribe-glazed vase with narrow neck, flaring mouth, and carved banding, 1955
      Artworks

      OKABE MINEO

      Oribe-glazed vase with narrow neck, flaring mouth, and carved banding, 1955
      Glazed stoneware
      8 3/8 x 4 1/2 x 4 3/8 in.
      Potter's mark: Artist's mark incised on bottom
      Box title: 織部一輪挿 (Oribe ichirinzashi); Oribe Glazed Single-stem Vase
      Box signature: 嶺 (Mine)
      Box seal: 嶺 (Mine)
    • KAMODA SHŌJI, Ash-glazed round vase with upraised mouth, 1968
      Artworks

      KAMODA SHŌJI

      Ash-glazed round vase with upraised mouth, 1968
      Glazed stoneware
      10 1/4 x 8 3/4 x 6 5/8 in.
      Box title: 炻器扁壷 (Sekki henko); Stoneware Flattened Vessel
      Box signature: 加守田章二 (Kamoda Shōji)
      Box seal: 章 (Shō)
    • KAMODA SHŌJI, Hexagonal platter with inlaid linear patterning, 1968
      Artworks

      KAMODA SHŌJI

      Hexagonal platter with inlaid linear patterning, 1968
      Stoneware
      1 3/8 x 16 in.
      Potter's mark: 章 (Shō) incised on bottom
      Box title: 加守田章二作 皿 (Kamoda Shōji saku sara); Platter created by Kamoda Shōji)
      Box signature: 加守田昌子識 (Kamoda Masako shiki); Authenticated by Kamoda Masako (Kamoda Shōji's wife)
      Box seal: 昌 (Masa)
    • KAMODA SHŌJI, Vessel with undulating red and green wave-like linear banding, 1971
      Artworks

      KAMODA SHŌJI

      Vessel with undulating red and green wave-like linear banding, 1971
      Glazed stoneware
      11 7/8 x 6 1/8 x 6 in.
      Potter’s mark: Artist’s mark incised on bottom
      Paper label on bottom: “21” (exhibition number)
      Box title: 筒形彩陶 (Tsutsugata saitō); Painted Cylindrical Form
      Box signature: 加守田章二 (Kamoda Shōji)
      Box seal: 章 (Shō)
    • KAMODA SHŌJI, Standing flattened, rounded rectangular vessel decorated with colored, curvaceous bands in light brown, ochre yellow, cream and blue...
      Artworks

      KAMODA SHŌJI

      Standing flattened, rounded rectangular vessel decorated with colored, curvaceous bands in light brown, ochre yellow, cream and blue overglaze enamel, 1975
      Glazed stoneware
      7 3/4 x 8 1/2 x 5 1/2 in.
      Potter’s mark: 一九七五 壷 (Senkyūhyakunanajūgo tsubo); 1975 Vase (incised on bottom)
      Box title: 一九七五 壷 (Senkyūhyakunanajūgo tsubo); 1975 Vase
      Box signature: 加守田章二 (Kamoda Shōji)
      Box seal: 章 (Shō)
    • KAMODA SHŌJI, Vessel, 1974
      Artworks

      KAMODA SHŌJI

      Vessel, 1974
      Glazed stoneware
      8 x 8 7/8 x 5 1/8 in.
      Potter's mark: 一九七四 章 (Senkyūhyakunanajūyon Shō); 1974 Shō (incised on base)
      Box title: 一九七四 壷 (Senkyūhyakunanajūyon tsubo); 1974 Vessel
      Box signature: 加守田章二 (Kamoda Shōji)
      Box seal: 章 (Shō)
    • KAMODA SHŌJI, Large round teabowl with abstract undulating patterning, ca. 1973
      Artworks

      KAMODA SHŌJI

      Large round teabowl with abstract undulating patterning, ca. 1973
      Glazed stoneware
      3 x 5 x 4 7/8 in.
      Potter's mark: 章 (Shō) incised on bottom
      Box title: 茶碗 (chawan); Teabowl
      Box signature: 加守田章二 (Kamoda Shōji)
      Box seal: 章 (Shō)
    • KAMODA SHŌJI, Flattened rectangular vessel decorated with colored, enamel-glazed radiating linear patterns, 1978
      Artworks

      KAMODA SHŌJI

      Flattened rectangular vessel decorated with colored, enamel-glazed radiating linear patterns, 1978
      Glazed stoneware
      11 3/4 x 7 7/8 x 4 1/2 in.
      Potter’s mark: 一九七八 壷 (Senkyūhyakunanajūhachi tsubo); 1978 Vase (incised on bottom)
      Box title: 一九七八 壷 (Senkyūhyakunanajūhachi tsubo); 1978 Vase
      Box signature: 加守田章二 (Kamoda Shōji)
      Box seal: 章二 (Shōji)
    • KAMODA SHŌJI, Cinched torso-like vessel with incised linear and dot motifs accentuated with slip and glaze, 1974
      Artworks

      KAMODA SHŌJI

      Cinched torso-like vessel with incised linear and dot motifs accentuated with slip and glaze, 1974
      Glazed stoneware
      9 1/8 x 8 1/2 x 4 1/2 in.
      Potter's mark: 一九七四 章 (Senkyūhyakunanajūyon Shō); 1974 Shō (incised on bottom)
      Box title: 一九七四 壷 (Senkyūhyakunanajūyon tsubo); 1974 Vessel
      Box signature: 加守田章二 (Kamoda Shōji)
      Box seal: 章 (Shō)
    • KAMODA SHŌJI, Tall elongated vase with curvilinear calligraphic patterning in white clay inlays, 1974
      Artworks

      KAMODA SHŌJI

      Tall elongated vase with curvilinear calligraphic patterning in white clay inlays, 1974
      Glazed stoneware
      15 1/2 x 7 3/8 x 6 in.
      Potter's mark: 一九七四 章 (Senkyūhyakunanajūyon Shō); 1974 Shō (incised on bottom)
      Box title: 一九七四 壷 (Senkyūhyakunanajūyon tsubo); 1974 Vessel
      Box signature: 加守田章二 (Kamoda Shōji)
      Box seal: 章 (Shō)
    • KAMODA SHŌJI, Bulbous gray vessel with tall neck and flared rim, 1979
      Artworks

      KAMODA SHŌJI

      Bulbous gray vessel with tall neck and flared rim, 1979
      Slip-glazed stoneware with overglaze enamels
      13 x 9 1/8 x 7 3/4 in.
      Potter's mark: 一九七九 章 (Senkyūhyakunanajūkyū Shō); 1979 Shō (incised on bottom)
      Box title: 一九七九 壷 (Senkyūhyakunanajūkyū tsubo); 1979 Vessel
      Box signature: 加守田章二 (Kamoda Shōji)
      Box seal: 章 (Shō)
    • KAMODA SHŌJI, Wide mouth vessel, ca. 1964
      Artworks

      KAMODA SHŌJI

      Wide mouth vessel, ca. 1964
      Ash-glazed stoneware
      7 1/2 x 7 1/8 in.
      Paper label on bottom: 章 (Shō) sealed on paper
      Box title: 灰釉壷 (Haiyū tsubo); Ash-glazed Vessel
      Box signature: 加守田章二 (Kamoda Shōji)
      Box seal: 章 (Shō)
    • TANAKA SAJIRŌ, Shinsha (copper red) glazed handled vase with raised, flared mouth, 2025
      Artworks

      TANAKA SAJIRŌ

      Shinsha (copper red) glazed handled vase with raised, flared mouth, 2025
      Glazed stoneware
      10 1/4 x 7 7/8 x 6 in.
      Box title: 辰砂花入 (Shinsha hanaire); Red Copper-glazed Vase
      Box signature: 佐次郎 (Sajirō)
      Box seal: 法月 (Hōgetsu)
    • TANAKA SAJIRŌ, Korean Karatsu vase with paired lugs and tall columnar neck, 1985
      Artworks

      TANAKA SAJIRŌ

      Korean Karatsu vase with paired lugs and tall columnar neck, 1985
      Glazed stoneware
      9 3/4 x 5 3/4 x 4 3/4 in.
      Box title: 朝鮮唐津花入 (Chōsen Karatsu hanaire); Korean Style Karatsu Vase
      Box signature: 佐次郎 (Sajirō)
      Box seal: 佐次郎 (Sajirō)
    • TANAKA SAJIRŌ, Shinsha (copper red) gourd-shaped vase with handles and flaring mouth, 2025
      Artworks

      TANAKA SAJIRŌ

      Shinsha (copper red) gourd-shaped vase with handles and flaring mouth, 2025
      Glazed stoneware
      9 1/8 x 6 1/8 x 6 in.
      Box title: 辰砂瓢花入 (Shinsha hyō hanaire); Red Copper-glazed Gourd Shaped Vase
      Box signature: 佐次郎 (Sajirō)
      Box seal: 法月 (Hōgetsu)
    • TANAKA SAJIRŌ, Low-sided slightly faceted teabowl, titled, Crimson Sunset (Akane iriai), 2025
      Artworks

      TANAKA SAJIRŌ

      Low-sided slightly faceted teabowl, titled, Crimson Sunset (Akane iriai), 2025
      Glazed stoneware
      3 3/4 x 6 1/4 x 6 in.
      Potter's mark: Artist's mark incised on foot
      Box title: 茜入相茶碗 (Akane iriai chawan); Crimson Sunset Teabowl
      Box signature: 佐次郎 (Sajirō)
      Box seal:法月 (Hōgetsu)
    • TANAKA SAJIRŌ, Karatsu waterjar with two lugs and recessed, knobbed lid, titled, As Clouds Form, 2025
      Artworks

      TANAKA SAJIRŌ

      Karatsu waterjar with two lugs and recessed, knobbed lid, titled, As Clouds Form, 2025
      Glazed stoneware
      8 3/8 x 9 x 8 in.
      Box title:
      唐津水指 (Karatsu mizusashi); Karatsu Waterjar
      銘 雲起る時 (Mei: Kumo okiru toki); Titled, As Clouds Form (The term 雲起時 is a reference to the line 行到水窮処、坐看雲起時, which is often used in Zen calligraphy)
      Box signature:
      令和七年極月 (Reiwa nana nen gokugetsu); December 2025
      法月 佐次郎 (Hōgetsu Sajirō)
      Box seal:法月 (Hōgetsu)
    • TANAKA SAJIRŌ, Faceted creamy white teabowl with dripping burgundy glaze, titled, Vermillion Cloud (Shu’un), 2025
      Artworks

      TANAKA SAJIRŌ

      Faceted creamy white teabowl with dripping burgundy glaze, titled, Vermillion Cloud (Shu’un), 2025
      Glazed stoneware
      4 3/8 x 5 1/4 x 5 1/8 in.
      Box title: 朱雲茶碗 (Shu'un chawan); Vermillion Cloud Teabowl
      Box signature: 佐次郎 (Sajirō)
      Box seal: 法月 (Hōgetsu)
  • Catalogue Introduction

    For Asia Week New York, Joan B Mirviss LTD presents Six Celestials, an exhibition featuring selected masterpieces by six artists whose seminal careers established the foundations upon which contemporary Japanese ceramics has been built. Each of these artists combined their unrivaled technical expertise in historical ceramic traditions with a unique and compelling artistic vision. By placing their diverse bodies of work in conversation with one another, the exhibition highlights the ways in which each of these twentieth-century icons helped pave the way for the emergence of Japanese ceramics as it exists today—one of the most dynamic and exciting fields of contemporary art.

     

    It is impossible to overstate the impact of Tomimoto Kenkichi's (1886-1963) legacy on contemporary Japanese ceramics. During his lifetime, he embodied a radically new vision of the ceramist as an artist rather than an artisan or craftsperson. Unlike the majority of his generation's ceramists, he was not born to a family of potters, nor did he ever formally apprentice in the trade. Instead, he received a thoroughly Western education, studying abroad in London before graduating from Tokyo Art School (now Tokyo University of the Arts), where he studied architecture and design. Throughout his career, he proudly proclaimed himself an "amateur" ceramist, an identity that was critical in the freedom it provided. Tomimoto fervently pursued originality in his work and avoided copying the work of past masters at all costs. He spent time sketching in nature to develop the meticulous polychrome enamel overglaze patterns for which he was designated a Living National Treasure. As the founder of the ceramics department at Kyoto City University of Arts, Tomimoto was also at the center of the university's emergence as the training ground for the next generation of cutting-edge Japanese ceramic artists. As a teacher, he taught his students to pay attention to the relationship between form and decoration and instilled in them the critical value of originality. Indeed, many of his students went on to become leaders of the field who successfully cemented the status of Japanese clay in the world of contemporary art.

     

    The son of a wealthy family, Ishiguro Munemaro's (1893-1968) decision to pursue ceramics was inspired by an early encounter with one of only three extant Song-dynasty yōhen tenmoku teabowls designated as national treasures (Inaba tenmoku). Captivated by the radiance of this lost glazing technique, Ishiguro dedicated his life to the pursuit of historical Chinese glazes. Having never formally apprenticed under any specific teacher, Ishiguro taught himself ceramics primarily by creating copies of historical wares. Over the course of his experiments, he perfected a wide range of historical styles, including Raku, Tang sançai (three-color), Mishima, and Karatsu. He was particularly lauded for recreating the highly difficult persimmon tenmoku glaze as well as the konoha (leaf print) tenmoku technique. His mastery of historical glazes earned him the designation of Living National Treasure in 1955. Despite their solid roots in the foundation of East Asian ceramic tradition, Ishiguro's ceramics even today retain a remarkable air of originality. Ishiguro used his repository of historical techniques in never-before-seen combinations while introducing fresh and contemporary motifs that express his unique vision as an artist.

     

    In contrast with these two contemporaries, Kawai Kanjirō (1890-1966) intentionally eschewed formal honors-including the title of Living National Treasure-for his masterful work, remaining true to the spirit of the Mingei (folk art) movement that he helped pioneer. He began his career in ceramics in 1910, when he enrolled in the ceramics division of a university in Tokyo. Upon graduation, he took a job at an important research center in Kyoto that specialized in historical East Asian ceramic techniques. There, he was said to have mixed the formulas for more than ten-thousand glazes. While this is likely an exaggeration, Kawai used his time there to develop his remarkable mastery of historical glazes from China, Korea, and Japan that later served as the foundation of his success as a ceramic artist. Through careful control of the glaze formula and firing conditions, he was able to achieve a wide range of unique and highly coveted effects. A notably prolific artist, Kawai used these to create distinctive designs and motifs on mold-cast ceramic forms, which he then fired in the climbing kiln he had built in the heart of Kyoto's Gojōzaka Kiyomizu ceramic district. Over the course of his career, Kawai transcended the very category of Mingei that he had helped define as his works developed from their roots in historical techniques to incorporate thoroughly modern elements of abstract expression. 

     

    Okabe Mineo (1919-1990) was born to a family of ceramists in the historic ceramic center of Seto. As a child, he was mentored in the world of clay by his grandfather, Kanō Kuwajirō, who would take him to clay pits and historic kiln sites. Okabe's father, Katō Tōkurō, was a renowned scholar of Momoyama-period ceramics and a ceramist in his own right, but the two were never close. Indeed, Okabe elected to change his surname from Katō to Okabe, his wife's maiden name, in 1978. By the time he started training at the Aichi Prefecture Seto Ceramics School, Okabe's skills already surpassed those of many of his instructors. It was not until 1947, however, that he began his ceramic career in earnest. Though he struggled with fragile health and family challenges until his death in 1990, Okabe created a diverse oeuvre of natural glazes and ceramic forms over the course of his career. At the core of his work is the relationship between clay forms and the classical glazes that adorn them. The creviced and textured surfaces of vessel bodies that he carved, incised, and impressed with a variety of tools draw attention to the seductive way in which the colors of his Oribe and ash glazes shift as pool and drip over the vessel forms. In contrast, Okabe tended to apply his Shino and celadon glazes over simpler clay forms, allowing the texture of the glaze itself-from the softly dimpled surface of Shino glaze to the deep craquelure that runs through his celadon-to take center stage. The exception to this rule-his celebrated celadon Jōmon series-proved to be the acme of his career. Okabe's brilliant work earned numerous awards and remains highly coveted even today.

     

    As a youth during World War II, Kamoda Shōji (1933-1983) discovered a passion for painting when it was not safe to play outside. His talent was quickly recognized, earning him awards at local exhibitions. When it came time to start university, however, he chose to pursue ceramics, a medium in which he had no experience, at the Kyoto City University of Arts ceramics department that had just been founded by Tomimoto Kenkichi two years prior. The time that he spent under Tomimoto's tutelage was transformative. Like his mentor, Kamoda had no family roots in the world of Japanese ceramics, allowing him the freedom to pursue his own exploration of the medium's potential. After graduating, he worked for a mass-market ceramic production company for two years before moving to northeastern Japan, where he came into his own as an independent artist. Embracing Tomimoto's call for originality, Kamoda's oeuvre is characterized by constant experimentation and transformation. At each of the two to three solo shows he held each year, he debuted unique bodies of work that employed new forms, glazes, techniques, and motifs that were highly sophisticated and fully realized as works of fine art. Each of these bodies of work contained the seeds of what was to come next, and Kamoda's complete oeuvre can be understood as a unified logical progression. This astonishing feat earned him a devoted audience of passionate collectors. Though his life was cut tragically short by leukemia at the age of 49, the legacy of Kamoda's twenty-year ceramic career continues to shape the current trajectory of contemporary Japanese clay art.

     

    The only artist in this exhibition still living, Tanaka Sajirō (b. 1937) is even today energetically creating ceramics at nearly the age of 90. A native of Kyūshū, he was long drawn to the region's historical Karatsu ceramic tradition that is rooted in the aesthetics and techniques developed by potters in Joseon Korea. He has also been involved in archeological excavations of Jōmon and Yayoi kiln sites. As a ceramist, Tanaka specializes in the so-called Korean Karatsu (chōsen Karatsu) style, which is characterized by the striking pairing of two or more high-contrast glazes that drip sensuously over one another when fired in the kiln, creating a vivid spectrum of colors where they merge. He infuses his ceramics with a sense of poetry and spirituality gained from long years of cultivation as an ordained Zen Buddhist priest.

     

    In many ways, the six celestials featured in this exhibition were pioneers under whose stewardship Japanese ceramic art was carried through the twentieth century. Born at the close of the nineteenth century, Tomimoto, Ishiguro, and Kawai all played critical roles ushering Japanese clay into this new period during a time of great turbulence and transformation in Japanese history. As the apogees of the following generation, Okabe, Kamoda, and Tanaka built their ceramic legacies in the second half of the century, shaping the trajectory of Japanese clay in the post-war world. While their careers took radically divergent paths, all six of these artists embody the ideal unity of technical prowess and independent artistic perspective that has allowed Japanese ceramics to emerge forcefully into the realm of first-rate contemporary art.

     

    —Nicolle Bertozzi

Join our mailing list

Subscribe

* denotes required fields

We will process the personal data you have supplied in accordance with our privacy policy (available on request). You can unsubscribe or change your preferences at any time by clicking the link in our emails.

Manage cookies
Copyright © 2026 Joan B Mirviss LTD
Site by Artlogic
Joan B Mirviss LTD

 

Japanese Ceramics and Fine Art

39 East 78th Street, Suite 401
New York, NY 10075

 

Monday - Friday, 11am - 6pm

And by appointment

 

 

Subscribe to our newsletter

info@mirviss.com

Telephone (212) 799-4021

Fax (212) 721-5148 

Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Facebook, opens in a new tab.
Youtube, opens in a new tab.

This website uses cookies
This site uses cookies to help make it more useful to you. Please contact us to find out more about our Cookie Policy.

Manage cookies
Reject non essential
Accept

Cookie preferences

Check the boxes for the cookie categories you allow our site to use

Cookie options
Required for the website to function and cannot be disabled.
Improve your experience on the website by storing choices you make about how it should function.
Allow us to collect anonymous usage data in order to improve the experience on our website.
Allow us to identify our visitors so that we can offer personalised, targeted marketing.
Save preferences
Close

Join our mailing list

Subscribe

* denotes required fields

We will process the personal data you have supplied in accordance with our privacy policy (available on request). You can unsubscribe or change your preferences at any time by clicking the link in our emails.