Hara kiyoshi potter biography
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Aoki Mokube / *Arakawa Toyozo / Bernard Leach / Eiraku Zengoro / *Fujimoto Yoshimichi / *Fujiwara Kei / *Fujiwara Yu / Hamada Shinsaku / *Hamada Shoji / *Hara Kiyoshi / Hirasawa Kuro / *Imaizumi Imaemon XIII / *Inoue Manji / *Isezaki Jun / *Ishiguro Munemaro / Itaya Hazan / *Ito Sekisui V / *Kaneshige Toyo / Kato Bakutai / *Kato Hajime / Kato Sekishun / Kato Shuntai / *Kato Kozo / *Kato Takuo / Kato Tokuro / Kato Usuke / Kawai Kanjiro / Kawai Takekazu / Kawakita Handeishi / *Kinjo Jiro / Kitaoji Rosanjin / Kiyomizu Rokubei / Koie Ryoji / *Kondo Yuzo / Koyama Fujio / Kuroda Koryo / *Maeda Akihiro / *Matsui Kosei / *Miura Koheiji / *Miwa Kyusetsu X / *Miwa Kyusetsu XI / Murata Gen / Nakagawa Jinenbo / *Nakajima Hiroshi / Nakamura Donen / *Nakazato Muan / Nishioka Koju / Nonomura Ninsei / Ogata Kenzan / Ogawa Choraku / Ohi Chozaemon / Okuda Eisen / Otagaki Rengetsu /
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Hara Kiyoshi 原 清 b. 1936
Hara Kiyoshi was designated in 2005 for his use of iron-based glazes (tetsu-yu) following in the footsteps of both Shimizu Uichi and Ishiguro Munemaro to become the third LNT designated for using iron-based glazes (after training with both his predecessors). The piece in the exhibition has more in common with Song Dynasty Jun ware, even down to the reduction, copper-red slash, and that’s because Hara’s work draws upon Chinese precursors just as the work of Ishiguro Munemaro and Shimizu Uichi did. This Jun-glazed ware is his second-style, as it were, and he is a master with this just as he is with the traditional browns and blacks we associate with iron containing glazes.
From the 1980s, he began to carve out his signature style by honing the use of a semi-opaque blue glaze. This blue takes on several hues: from a warm Turkish blue, to the green-blue tones of celadon. Other works take on a lighter, cool cobalt. His immersion into this color over both
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List of Living National Treasures of Japan (crafts)
This list of Living National Treasures of Japan (crafts) contains all the individuals and groups certified as Living National Treasures by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of the government of Japan in the category of the Japanese crafts (工芸技術, Kōgei Gijutsu).
Crafts are divided into eight categories: pottery, textiles, lacquerware, metalworking, dollmaking, woodworking, papermaking, and other. The categories are subdivided into a number of more specific subcategories.
Those working in crafts are eligible for recognition either individually (Individual Certification) or as part of a group (Preservation Group Certification).
List of current designated individuals (crafts)
[edit]Ceramics
[edit]Textiles
[edit]Name | Born | Category | Subcategory | Year Designated |
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Yasutaka Komiya (小宮康孝) | 1925 | Textiles | Edo Komon | 1978 |
Hiroshi Tajima (田島比呂子) | 1922 | Textiles | Yuzen
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