You might see a cracked cup and toss it in the trash, but Takuro Kuwata (tah-koo-roh koo-wah-tah) relishes imperfections like the ones in his 2011 Tea Yellow-Green Slipped Platinum Kairagi Shino Bowl, above. Reflective silver shards crack across a green porcelain (a type of fine ceramic) surface, as if the vessel has outgrown its skin.
“Working with . . . colors makes me feel good, and the emotions that come from this kind of creation make . . . me feel very joyful,” the artist explains.
Kuwata creates this surface quality using glaze, a liquid applied to the surface of ceramics before firing—the process of heating to dry and harden them. Chemical reactions in the kiln, a special oven for firing ceramics, transform Kuwata’s work. After he glazes his ceramics, the artist never knows exactly what will emerge from the kiln.
The element of surprise is a key part of Kuwata’s process. The Japanese artist explores wabi-sabi (wah-bee sah-bee), a Japanese philosophy that finds beauty in things that are flawed. Do you see flaws, beauty, or both in the example above?