Images above show a couple of unglazed electric kiln fired pots I made last year. The one on
the left is inspired by rectangular nanban pots, which are less common than the
round ones. It was also the first time I tried a combination of slab and coil
building to form a bonsai pot (dimensions 20 x 27 x 11 cm). This technique is
used by some Japanese potters to make large bonsai pots. The pot on the right
was my attempt to imitate this slip decoration technique that I’ve seen on some
Chinese pots. This pot is small, about 10 cm in diameter.
Saturday, March 25, 2017
My Fergus Stewart pot
This year’s AusBonsai Market held at Auburn Japanese Garden was great.
My deep gratitude to the organizers. I was just curious about what’s new and one
stall selling bonsai pots immediately got my attention. The first thoughts that
came to my mind were wood-fired ceramics by a highly skilled potter, but not a
career bonsai pot maker. All pots were on the larger side, round, skilfully
thrown on a potter’s wheel. Some of them were about a meter in diameter! You
have to be a potter to appreciate that. I had to know who the potter is and the
stall owner was too happy to tell the story. A Scottish ceramic artist Fergus
Stewart with a passion for wood-fired ceramics worked in Australia between 1981
and 2002. Around 1999 while working at the Strathnairn Ceramics Workshop in
Canberra, Fergus Stewart was commissioned by a Canberra bonsai grower John
Remmel to make a series of bonsai pots. The examples of pot shapes and glazes given
by Remmel were illustrations from “Matsudaira
Mame Bonsai Collection Album” published in 1975. Stewart had to develop
several glazes to match the illustrations in the album. Most pots had either a
chop mark “FS” or signed “Stewart”. It turns out that the lot of them was never
used and ended up for sale in this year’s bonsai market. Many of the pots had
no feet and looked more like your typical English handmade functional stoneware
rather than bonsai containers. Perhaps this was the reason why this stall was
largely ignored by the market crowd. It’s a shame because they are a product of
great craftsmanship and would work with certain trees. Nevertheless, in some instances
Stewart did manage to capture the essence of a bonsai pot and I simply could
not resist buying one of those (see image below, round 6 x 40 cm).
Monday, March 20, 2017
Byōdō-in temple, Uji
During my short residency at Fujukawa Kuoka-en in Osaka a couple of
years ago, I was wandering what to do on my weekly day off. My bonsai
instructor Maeoka-san pointed at the obverse of a ten-yen coin and said: “Go to
Uji, it’s very peaceful there”. I
thought if this place is depicted on their money, it has to be amazing. I was
aware that Uji is famous for its tea, but knew little about Byōdō-in temple depicted on the coin. A
quick Internet search informed me that the temple began its existence in 1052
when a Fujiwara clan country house was converted into a temple. The
construction of its most beautiful and famous building known today as the
Phoenix Hall was completed in the following year (see images above and below).
The coolest thing about the Phoenix Hall is that it’s a wooden structure which
hasn’t been burned or destroyed for nearly a thousand years. What we see today
is roughly how it looked during the heyday of Heian period. So, for me,
visiting Byōdō-in was like time travel.
Byōdō-in museum was fascinating too, but photography was prohibited. All
temple buildings except Phoenix Hall were burnt down during a war in the 14th
century, so the other buildings reflect later architectural styles (see images
below). To sum up, Byōdō-in is one of the most beautiful places I’ve seen in
Japan.
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