Brand: Hiroaki Omori |
Available: 0 |
Hiroaki Omori, Bizenyaki non-glazed wood-fired mentori houhin 120ml, small teapot, kyusu
Made by Hiroaki Omori
Made in Japan
Size:About Height 7.5cm * Length 9.8cm * Depth 8.4cm
Material:Pottery
Capacity:(Maximum) 120ml
Package: Wood Box
Shipping Cost (It might differ from the real EMS shipping rate)
Asia District (Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, Philippines, Macau, China, etc.) - JPY 2200
America District(USA, Canada, Mexico, Costa Rica, etc) - JPY 3000
Oceanea District(Australia, New Zealand, New Caledonia, Fiji, Papua New Guinia, etc) - JPY 3000
Middle East District(Turkey, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Oman, Qatar, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait Bahrain, Israel, etc )- JPY 3000
Europe District(France, England, Germany, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Belguim, Poland, Russia, etc) - JPY 3200
Shipping method
We use EMS(Express Mail Service). After we ship the product, it will take 3-10days to arrive at your place. You can track the parcel.
Purchaser of the product must read the below condition carefully.
Return/exchange and refund
We will not accept return/exchange of the product unless the products we sold have any damages or we shipped the wrong item. If we accept the return/exchange, the products must be complete and without any signs of having been used or damaged.
The product is carefully examined before shipping. However, in case there is any damage in the product, you should check the product within 7 days and report to us after receiving it (the days are calculated fromt the proven date of delivery). Otherwise, we will not be responsible for the damage, so please check the quantity, apparent condition, etc., when the product arrives.
The color of the product you will receive might look slightly different from the pictures you see in this web page. This is because depending on the amount of light when the picture was taken, the color in each picture might look different. Please understand, we will not accept return or make refund because of the above reasons.
We will not be responsible for any of the customs clearance and customs duty/tariff payment.
Hiroaki ōmori
Hand-cut diagonal grooves accent the subtly planed walls of Hiroaki ōmori’s signature “Bevel”-style pieces, exuding an air of rustic elegance. The pieces are made entirely by hand – clay is pulled and pinched until thin, leaving a unique pattern of indentations on every surface of ōmori’s pots and cups. The artist’s touch has indeed hardly been more visible.
The artist draws heavily on the style of Bizen-ware, refined across millennia in the Bizen region of Okayama Prefecture, in Western Japan. Practitioners do not rely on glaze to make their pieces shine; rather, each work develops a warm, natural patina during one to two weeks in a wood-fired kiln.
Yet while ōmori incorporates the Bizen tradition into the very core of his work, his pieces also contain a taste of the contemporary. Smatterings of other styles, including thin-pressed pottery reminiscent of that found in Kyoto, find their way into his pieces as well.
ōmori was born in 1969 in the heart of Bizen City. His father, Teruhiko ōmori, is the third-generation head of the Jindō Workshop, famed for the incredibly detailed figures of animals – dragons, in particular – it affixes to its top-class teaware. The first head of the shop was named a Living Cultural Treasure by Okayama Prefecture, and boasted skills so well developed that his pieces were chosen as gifts presented to the emperor. The workshop continues to be recognized as the birthplace of some of the best and most finely crafted carvings and figurines that Bizen ware has to offer.
Thus Hiroaki ōmori began learning the family trade from his father at a young age, starting with the mixing of clay. His maternal grandfather – and second head of the shop – ōae Jindō also took the boy under his wing. The two would make animal figurines together, and when ōmori was in elementary school, his grandfather taught him how to use a pottery wheel. He quickly learned to make bowls and other simple objects, and claims that, even then, he had some idea that his future would be in ceramics.
ōmori helped his family work the kiln throughout middle and high school. After graduation, he headed to Kyoto Saga University of Arts, then a two-year junior college, to study ceramics. The school was one of the few in Japan at the time to teach pottery, and did it in the distinctive Kyoto style, teaching the area’s traditional Kyō-yaki techniques alongside universal glazing and firing methods.
ōmori’s experience during and after college would also eventually give rise to his experiments fusing the typical thin-walled Kyoto style of pottery with his native Bizen-ware. After graduation, he worked in the area for two years while continuing to study Kyō-yaki, before returning home to an apprenticeship under his father.
Kyō-yaki prizes an extreme care for regular, well-shaped form. But working under his father, ōmori learned to adopt a key tenet of the Bizen style: intentionally breaking down clean lines and deforming a well-shaped piece.
“Unlike the finicky and sensitive Kyō-yaki, Bizen-ware finds beauty in the meaningful destruction of form,” ōmori says. “That gives the pieces an immense impact and highlights the unique qualities of Bizen clay.”
After four more years of study, ōmori set out on his own, forming an independent workshop and submitting to pottery exhibitions. In 2006, his work was selected for the Japan Traditional Art Crafts Exhibition, sponsored by the Japan Kōgei Association – a mark that a new artist has truly arrived.
“The indispensible hallmarks of the Jindō workshop are finely detailed sculpture work and top-grade teaware,” ōmori says. “But even as I pay heed to those arts, I hope to blend in new styles and influences to create truly revolutionary works.”
We use EMS(Express Mail Service). After we ship the product, it will take 3-10days to arrive at your place. You can track the parcel.
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