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Produced
by a pre-war cultural organization in Japan, the film is a work
of rare clarity and beauty which follows an entire pottery making
cycle as performed in that village for centuries. Mashiko
ceramic manufacture is said to date back to 1853, when a potter
from a neighboring village came as an adopted son to a Mashiko farming
family. The village later became one of the most prolific producers
of utilitarian ware for Tokyo; principally jars, mortars, and teapots.
In 1919 Shoji Hamada, potter and central
figure of the Folk Craft Movement, chose Mashiko to build his kiln.
His presence had a major impact on the village, bringing it to world
attention by the1960's. The writings of Bernard
Leach contain many descriptions of life and work in Mashiko
Village.
The film presents the household of the Sakuma
family. This same family gave Hamada his home during his earliest
years in Mashiko. Today their descendants continue pottery making
at the same site.
Also
shown at work is the great painter of teapots Masu
Minagawa, described in the writings of Soetsu
Yanagi, Bernard Leach and Hamada as a paradigm of their "mingei"
(folkcraft) philosophy. Minagawa was an illiterate itinerant painter
of patterns on Mashiko teapots who travelled among the kilns in
the village with her brushes, hand-made from local dog hair. It
is said that Minagawa decorated up to one thousand teapots a day.
Film restored by Marty Gross

For More Information
Contact Marty Gross Film Productions, Inc.
at 416.536.3355 or
email videos@martygrossfilms.com
for more information about purchasing or licensing this film for
broadcast.
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