Wednesday, January 3, 2024

238. SAKATA Jinnai, 1943­- , white clay colored, wave-patterned, flattened vase)

238.  SAKATA Jinnai 坂田甚内 , 1943­- , Hakudeisai hajō henko  白泥彩波状  (white clay colored, wave-patterned, flat-sided vase)

 








Sakata Jinnai was born in Tokyo in 1943 and apprenticed under Kamoda Shōji in 1964, establishing his first kiln in 1966. His work was selected for display at the Nihon Dentō Kōgei Shinsakuten (National Traditional New Crafts Exhibition) in 1969, and the following year at the Nihon Dentō Kōgeiten (National Traditional Crafts Exhibition). In 1971 his work was exhibited at the first Nihon Tōgeiten National Ceramics Exhibition. This event toured the United States and Canada as well. Two years later he was seen there again, and this time the show toured South America. In 1977 he moved away from the competitive world of mass exhibitions and focused more on private galleries. He was the first artist selected for display at the newly opened Takashimaya Gallery in New York in 1993. Work by him is held in the collections of the British Museum, Rockefeller Foundation, Sakuma Museum, and Waseda University Museum, as well as some of Japan's holiest sites such as the Ise Shrine, Izumo Shrine, Takachiho Shrine, Yakushiji in Nara, and both Kodaiji and Enryakuji in Kyoto. Not limited to clay, he also works in painting, washi handmade paper (from 1995), and glass (from 2000). 

White clay, with kiln effects in coral and brown on the sides and top; the base is largely free of color; the interior is blackened with soot. Weight: 4 kg (8.9 lbs). Height: 31 cm (12-1/4 in). Length: 22.7 cm (8-7/8 in). Width: 9.8 cm (3-7/8 in). 

This is a rectangular box, with longer front and back wall panels, and narrower side wall panels. The wall panels are about a centimeter (3/8 in) thick. The piece sits on the bottom edges of the walls. The bottom of the piece is recessed 2 cm (3/4 in) from the lower edges of the exterior walls. The joins where the bottom meets the side panels have been filled in with clay rounded in concave arcs. The artist’s seal, a square cartouche with the seal-script form of the character , was impressed into the center of the bottom panel. The front and back panels have the same shape. At the bottom of each of these panels are three irregularly shaped indents. The sides of the panels rise in roughly straight lines to a height of 23 cm (9 in) and then curve inward. A rectangular piece was cut out of the tops of both panels, centered across the width, 13.4 cm (5-1/4 in) wide and 2.7 cm (1-1/16 in) deep. This creates four “horns” at the top. The two end sides are recessed about 1.3 cm (1/2 in) from the outer edges of the front and back panels. As with the bottom, the joins between the panels were filled in with clay rounded in concave arcs. At the top, the side panels curve inward, ending just before the peaks of the “horns.”  The top opening has two panels bordering the exterior walls, recessed 1.3 cm (1/2 in) below the lower edge of the rectangular cutout on the front and back panels. The two recessed panels measure roughly 9.2 x 3.8 cm (3-5/8 x 1-1/2 in), leaving an opening into the interior 8.8 x 7.3 cm (3-5/8 x 2-3/8 in). On the interior of the vase is a rectangular panel, running between the front and the back walls and from the center of the bottom to roughly two-thirds of the way up the piece, perhaps serving as a brace to strengthen the exterior walls. 

The exterior of the piece, including the bottom and the recessed panels at the top were scored with a metal comb-like tool to create wave patterns. These patterns are irregular and random. The surface of this piece is coarse and unfinished.

Kiln effects randomly colored the clay coral, with many patches of the white clay body showing through, creating a mottled effect. There are a few darker brown blotches. 

This came in a wooden box inscribed by Sakata, along with an orange covering cloth and a printed biography. The upper side of the lid is inscribed, in two lines, 白泥彩 hakudeisai (white clay, colored)  波状 hajō henko  (wave-patterned, flat-sided vase)/ The bottom side of the lid is inscribed 甚内  Jinnai, with Sakata’s seal in red.

 Purchased from the Kara Monzen Gallery in Kyoto, Japan, in December 2023. (Invoice, shipping and customs documents)

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