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Playful and Soulful: New Kutaniyaki by Horihata Ran

September 28, 2020Ceramics Horihata Ran

Kutaniyaki by Horihata Ran in our Shop ->

People often ask how I select makers for Entoten, and the short answer is that those chosen make work that I react to emotionally. To put it another way, ‘what they make me feel’ is more important than ‘how they look.’

For Kutani potter Horihata Ran, I fell in love with her whimsical work after coming across it at a department store in Tokyo in 2019. Her work was shown in a section featuring young and upcoming makers, and I was extremely moved by her soulful brush strokes.

Homemade Japanese sweets on iroe square plates by Horihata Ran. Tea practitioners often make their own sweets to serve to guests at a tea gathering. It is another way to infuse the host’s hospitality into the occasion and the offerings are enhanced by handmade plates like Ran’s Kutaniyaki.

 

Kutani Iroe square plates with diamond decoration by Horihata Ran. Uneven pattern edges resemble a torn brocade.

 

After Ran’s work was introduced for the first time by Entoten in the U.S. last December, many people inquired about her one of a kind pieces. So this time, I requested mostly one-off pieces because I was also intrigued by what she would come up with.

“When I saw that my larger pieces were quickly chosen by people in America, I thought, wow American people are so dynamic,” Ran said excitedly, “so for this batch, I wanted to create pieces that I’ve always dreamed of making.” And with that enthusiasm, Ran worked on her pieces and sent a trove of lovely work this summer.

Ran wanted to make a jar inspired by the celebrated Korean jars from the Joseon era, but realized she needed much more skill and research to even remotely resemble them. So she took her brush and put everything she had into painting lively flowers. “I think in that sense, I’ve created something that I can only create once in my lifetime,” Ran said.

 

Lidded Kutani akae jar. Ran excels and loves to make lidded jars even though it entails many steps in the making. “The lid and body are thrown separately and trimmed to fit together. When the lid fits perfectly after firing, I feel great satisfaction,” Ran said.

 

Figs on a Sometsuke pedestal plate by Horihata Ran.  She wanted to create pedestal plates that she visualized on American dining tables alongside candles and flowers.

 

Unpacking Ran’s work was especially poignant for me because it has been many months since I received a ceramics shipment from Japan because the pandemic had curtailed freight services. I hope that Ran’s cheerful work will remind you to play often and to keep your downtrodden souls in check, just like they did for me.

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