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*[[Brooklyn Museum|The Brooklyn Museum]]
*[[Brooklyn Museum|The Brooklyn Museum]]
*[[Metropolitan Museum of Art|The Metropolitan Museum of Art]]
*[[Metropolitan Museum of Art|The Metropolitan Museum of Art]]
*[[National Crafts Museum (Japan)|National Crafts Museum, Kanazawa]]
*[National Crafts Museum (Japan)|National Crafts Museum, Kanazawa]]
[[National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto|The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto]]
*[[National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto|The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto]]
*[[[[Portland Art Museum|The Portland Art Museum]]]]
*[[[Portland Art Museum|The Portland Art Museum]]]


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 00:56, 1 May 2023

Osamu Suzuki (鈴木 治, Suzuki Osamu) (1926-2001) was a Japanese ceramicist and one of the co-founders of the artist group Sōdeisha (eng. "Crawling through Mud Association"), a Japanese avant-garde ceramics movement that arose following the end of the Second World War and served as a counter to the traditional forms and styles in modern Japanese ceramics, such as Mingei. Working in both iron-rich stoneware and porcelain, Suzuki developed his style considerably over the course of his career, beginning with functional vessels in his early work, and spanning to fully sculptural works (which he called "clay images") in the latter half of his career.[1] Suzuki has been described by The Japan Times as "one of Japan's most important ceramic artists of the 20th century."[2]

Early Life and Education

Suzuki was born on November 11, 1926 in the Gojo area of Kyoto, a historic arts area in which a number of influential ceramics artists, including Kiyomizu Rokubei, Ogata Kenzan, and Kawai Kanjirō had worked and established studios. He became familiar with ceramics from a young age, as his father, Ugenji Suzuki, was a lathe master and production potter at Eiraku Zengoro Studio.[3]

Suzuki studied ceramics and graduated from the ceramics department of The Kyoto Second Industrial School in 1943, just avoiding conscription in the military during the Second World War.[4]

Career as an Artist

Founding of Sodeisha

In 1948, Suzuki and two other young potters, Kazuo Yagi and Hikaru Yamada, founded Sodeisha, an avant-garde artist movement that sought to push back against the traditional aesthetics of Japanese ceramics, particularly relating to the mingei or folk-craft movement, which they regarded to promote rustic nostalgia and simplicity over modernist innovation. Using traditional firing and glazing techniques while simultaneously seeking to push the existing boundaries of form in contemporary ceramics, the three artists circulated inaugural postcards to publicize their manifesto, which read:


Postwar art needed the expediency of creating associations in order to escape from personal confusion; but today, finally, the provisional roles appear to have ended. The birds of dawn taking flight out of the forest of falsehood not discover the reflections in the spring of truth. We are united not to provide a 'warm bed of dreams,' but to come to terms with our existence in broad daylight.[5]


In this way, Sodeisha, the name of which originated from a Chinese term that meant 'glazing flaw,'[6] not only sought to disrupt cultural and historical associations that pottery had in Japanese society, but also to find beauty in the aesthetics of nature's imperfections.

During these early years, the three Sodeisha artists experimented largely with forms of Cizhou ware, a style of ceramics originating in China in the late Tang and early Ming dynasties. The potters took this traditional form and applied unconventional decor to its surface; art historian Louise Cort posits that Suzuki's 1950 vase Rondo may have been a result of seeing a photograph of an abstract Jackson Pollock painting.[7]

The 1950s and 60s: Shifts in Style and Technique

It was not long, however, before the members of the fledgling Sodeisha movement were even starting to take issue with the typical vase form itself, since this template was based on the very aesthetic foundations against with the group sought to rebel.

Thus, Suzuki and his colleagues began to move away from creating traditional vessel openings in their work, experimenting with asymmetry and multiple mouths, as in the case of Suzuki's 1951 Two Headed Jar, a horn-shaped piece that featured two large openings. Additionally, in the late 1950s the potters began using rough, unglazed clay to create a more unfinished, naturalistic effect.

Not all of the changes to Suzuki's oeuvre were based on choice. In the 1960s, the world of Kyoto ceramics took a huge turn when the city government banned the use of traditional woodfiring kilns due to air pollution concerns. As a result, they began using gas and electric kilns, applying thin layers of iron oxide to their pieces before firing to create similar coloration to that produced by the Shigaraki kilns they had previously used.[8]

In addition to the iron-rich stoneware emblematic of Sodeisha's well-known 'muddy' aesthetic, Suzuki always worked in the contrastingly polished medium of white porcelain. Since he worked in both mediums throughout his career, Suzuki was known for keeping an immaculate studio, deep-cleaning the space after each use to prevent cross-contamination between the two materials.[9]

Later Life and Death

In 1990, Suzuki became Dean of the Faculty of Fine Arts at the Kyoto University of the Arts. He retired in 1992 and became an Emeritus Professor. In his final years, he received a number of awards recognizing his lifetime of achievement as an artist and innovator, including designation as a Person of Cultural Merit in Kyoto in 1993.

Suzuki died of esophageal cancer on April 9th, 2001.[10]

Select List of Exhibitions and Holdings

Suzuki's work can be found in museum and gallery collections around the world, including:

References

  1. ^ "Clay Image: The First Branch (Deisho: Saisho no eda)". Japan Society Official Website. Retrieved 30 April 2023.
  2. ^ Yellin, Robert. "Crawling through the Mud in Style". Japan Times. Retrieved 30 April 2023.
  3. ^ Matsuo, Amiko (2014). "Suzuki Osamu, Sodeisha and Ceramic Identity in Modern Japan". Ceramics: Art and Perception (96): 4–5.
  4. ^ Cort, Louise Allison (December 2004). "Crawling through Mud: Avant-Garde Ceramics in Postwar Japan". Studio Potter. 33 (1).
  5. ^ Yellin, "Crawling through the Mud in Style."
  6. ^ Ibid.
  7. ^ Cort, "Crawling through Mud."
  8. ^ Ibid.
  9. ^ Matsuo, "Suzuki Osamu, Sodeisha, and Ceramic Identity in Modern Japan," 5.
  10. ^ "鈴木治 (Suzuki Osamu)". Tobunken (Tokyo National Reseach Institute for Cultural Properties). Retrieved 30 April 2023.