Storage jar

Minneapolis Institute of Art

Storage jar

Japan

Date
15th century
Medium
Shigaraki ware, stoneware with natural ash glaze
Department
Asian Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

The town of Shigaraki, southeast of Kyoto, was one of Japan’s great pottery-making centers, producing huge numbers of large storage jars and sturdy mortars (vessels used for grinding seeds and spices). Shigaraki clay contains high levels of sand and the mineral feldspar—imperfections that burst, or “bloom, ” in the kiln, giving the surface its characteristic roughness. This jar also has an unusually heavy deposit of natural glaze, the result of wood ash settling on the vessel’s shoulder, liquefying in the heat, and then running down the sides in dramatic, uneven drips. Asia

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