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  • Pop Up Craft, Stationery, and Clothing Show at The Den on Laurel Street Apr. 15th & 16th March 15, 2023
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  • Guide to Choosing Your Tea Whisk for Matcha
    Guide to Choosing Your Tea Whisk for Matcha
  • Oribe Coffee Pour Over Sets by Kuriya Masakatsu at Bay Park Coffee in San Diego
    Oribe Coffee Pour Over Sets by Kuriya Masakatsu at Bay Park Coffee in San Diego
  • Beyond the Object: Visiting Kawai Kanjiro’s House in Kyoto
    Beyond the Object: Visiting Kawai Kanjiro’s House in Kyoto
  • A Tour of the Pottery Towns of Southern Japan: Part I: Karatsu
    A Tour of the Pottery Towns of Southern Japan: Part I: Karatsu
  • Pop Up Craft, Stationery, and Clothing Show at The Den on Laurel Street Apr. 15th & 16th
    Pop Up Craft, Stationery, and Clothing Show at The Den on Laurel Street Apr. 15th & 16th

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Category: Kuriya Masakatsu

Oribe Coffee Pour Over Sets by Kuriya Masakatsu at Bay Park Coffee in San Diego

By:
Ai Kanazawa
July 5, 2021Ceramics Kuriya Masakatsu

Coffee Pour Over Sets and Cups by Kuriya Masakatsu in our shop->

I drink coffee every morning and to prepare it, I use a ceramic pour over set by Mashiko potter Kuriya Masakatsu. The dripper fits the paper filter (v60 #1&2 Hario) perfectly, and the pitcher’s long pointed spout pours beautifully into any handmade cup. They are ideal for me and maybe for you too, so I am very happy to share Kuriya-san’s Oribe work in my online shop for the first time in 8 years.

Oribe coffee pour over set by Mashiko potter, Kuriya Masakatsu
Elegant and bold Oribe glaze by Kuriya Masakatsu

Many of you said that the Entoten pop-up event in June in Banker’s Hill was a great opportunity to see and touch craft in person after I closed my small gallery at the height of the Covid Pandemic in 2020.  I wanted to find a place where people can see Kuriya san’s work in person, so I asked Ryosuke Goto, the owner of Bay Park Coffee, if he could let me borrow a small corner inside his shop to display Kuriya-san’s work, and he kindly agreed!

The display shelf and a cup of cortado at Bay Park Coffee in San Diego

Bay Park Coffee is a popular local coffee shop only a few minutes away by car from my house. Ryosuke took over the ownership of the shop in 2018 after running a coffee stand inside a county office building for 4 years. It is a laid back and friendly coffee shop where Ryosuke and his staff takes the time and care to talk to you and get to know you.  “I want Bay Park Coffee to be a place for people to gather and meet, a hub of new encounters and beginnings,” he says. Ryosuke also loves music and tea and hopes to collaborate with musicians and tea farmers by hosting them at Bay Park Coffee in the future.

Ryosuke working behind the counter at Bay Park Coffee

So please stop by at Bay Park Coffee, have a cup of your favorite espresso drink pulled from their beautiful La Marzocco machine by their attentive staff, and see and hold Kuriya san’s work in person. The human aspect is the key ingredient for a good cup of coffee, don’t you agree?

While you drive down Morena Blvd., look out for the new trolley stations that are almost finished for San Diego’s Mid-Coast Trolley Extension.  I’m surprised that hardly anyone around me talks about the trolley, but I’m excited, because coming from Tokyo, I love being on public transportation to gaze out the windows, people watch, and read as I go places.  In November, the trolley extension will finally open and I will definitely take it to enjoy our newly connected community and get a cup of cortado from Bay Park Coffee.

Coffee Pour Over Sets and Cups by Kuriya Masakatsu will be available July 5th (Mon)-18th (Sun) 2021 at Bay Park Coffee: 4130 Napier St, San Diego, CA 92110 (Click for Google Maps)

A Study in Contrasts: The Unconventional Style of Mashiko Potter Kuriya Masakatsu

By:
Ai Kanazawa
January 24, 2014Ceramics Kuriya Masakatsu

Ceramics by Kuriya Masakatsu in our shop ->

Kuriya Masakatsu thrives on the notion that opposites attract. From traditional to modern and mainstream to fringe, he relishes going against conventional wisdom. Who else in Japan would have the audacity to turn traditional green glazed Oribe ceramics into stylish speakers or coffee pour-overs?

Ceramic-Speakers
A set of ceramic speakers created by Kuriya Masakatsu

This duality and taking the road less traveled is the hallmark of Kuriya-san and his journey as a potter. He started out by learning Japanese painting at Akita University and ended up working at a cutting edge media broadcasting company in Akita. While Kuriya-san enjoyed his job as a TV production staffer, he yearned to be able to create something by himself from beginning to end.

So on the sidelines of his day job, Kuriya-san started learning ceramics under the instruction of potter Kurata Tetsuya in Akita. “I loved the fact that a potter has the ability to make decisions not just in the creative process but also how their items are presented, marketed, sold and used.”  Throwing convention aside, he decided to leave his stable company job to become a potter and moved to the famous pottery town of Mashiko to apprentice under Okuma Toshiaki.

Kuriya-Masakatsu
Potter Kuriya Masakatsu working at his studio in Mashiko, Tochigi
Photo courtesy of Kuriya Masakatsu

When I first met Kuriya-san at one of his solo exhibitions, he greeted me by pouring a cup of coffee from one of his handmade drippers. “I like to make coffee for guests and play music in the background on my speakers. My show is interactive where guests can see my work in action”, he explained.

Coffee pour-over set and cup and saucer by Kuriya Masakatsu.
Coffee pour-over set by Kuriya Masakatsu

Kuriya-san’s creations are designed and tested to fully serve their intended purpose. They are also direct manifestations of his passion: music, coffee, food and drink. “My principle is to make things that I enjoy making. It is hard to imagine that any work will resonate with users if I did not enjoy creating them in the first place”, he says.

What is most exciting about Kuriya-san’s work is that he is not limited by the preconceived idea of utilitarian handmade ceramics that is especially hard for young Japanese potters to break free from. His trademark green glaze, Oribe, is one of the oldest colored glazes, and when he uses it on some of his carved contemporary forms, the combination brings out a truly unique effect.

Oribe vase by Kuriya Masakatsu
Oribe vase by Kuriya Masakatsu

Another aspect of Kuriya-san’s contrasting approach is his efforts to build a sense of community within the scattered pottery circles in Mashiko. One would think that someone who became a potter to be able to strike out on his own is something of a lone wolf. But I discovered Kuriya-san through his role as an organizer for the creation of an online database of Mashiko potters and as director of the Mashiko Ceramics and Art Association. Both are efforts to build resources for the town’s potters, and for supporting collaborations between these potters and overseas.

Kuriya-san explains why he is willing to invest so much time and effort into a non-paying position. “There are some 450 potters living in Mashiko, and the reality is that not everyone can succeed without a little help from the others. The need for collaboration and cooperation really became apparent when the earthquake happened in 2011, which destroyed many potters’ studios and kilns.”

A large pile of shard at potter Matsuzaki Ken's studio after the 2011 earthquake in Mashiko. Photo courtesy of Ayumi Horie
A large pile of shard at potter Matsuzaki Ken’s studio after the 2011 earthquake in Mashiko
Photo courtesy of Ayumi Horie

It is refreshing to see that while many artists are absorbed in their own work, Kuriya-san volunteers his time and web-designing skills for the community of artists in Mashiko and beyond.

When I asked him why he devotes so much time in the community, he said, “I am a maverick inside, but I know that I can’t survive alone.”  He joked that being a potter makes him a little philosophical and explained his faith in the power of cooperation in relation to pottery making. “Clay is natural, so it might be interpreted as man facing nature. But we are also part of that nature, which is much larger and grander.” To this contemplative potter, ceramic making is much more than simply about himself.

 

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