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Masatake Fukumori

Masatake Fukumori, the Eccentric

October 20th - October 28th, 2023

展览

Exhibition view

The connoisseur Masatake Fukumori has come to Ginza

Igamaruhashira in Mie Prefecture is on the border between Omi and Iga, a remote area where nature remains unchanged throughout the four seasons.Long ago, it was the bottom of Lake Biwa, and the alluvial layers of the earth gave it fire-resistant soil, so it has been a pottery village since the Nara period.

Fukumori Masatake, the seventh generation of the Doraku Kiln, which has been in business in this area since the Edo period, has a piercing gaze that seems to have the power to grasp the essence of things in an instant. This is probably because he grew up listening to cultural figures such as Yanagi Muneyoshi who visited his home as a boy.
Having lost his father at the age of 16, he must have had many hardships in taking over the family business of Iga pottery.
He didn't have a teacher, but simply worked on clay, and must have put in incredible effort to become an expert who could turn a potter's wheel even with his eyes closed.
He also practiced zazen at a Zen temple in Kyoto and learned the philosophy and thoughts of Great Ajari Mitsunaga Sumido, who led the Sennichi Kaihogyo.

People call him "Doraku-san."
Doraku was a genius at hospitality, arranging wild flowers and cooking seasonal cuisine, and delighting the eyes and palates of many cultural figures, including the Shirazu Jiro and Masako couple, and the Kurodas, Tatsuaki and Inuiyoshi.
I wonder what they talked about as they shared drinks late into the night.
What will you encounter now? Who will you meet now? What is beautiful now? Is it delicious? Is it fun?
Doraku has lived his life to the fullest, together with people and things.

A few years ago, he handed over the Toraku kiln to his daughter Michiho and returned to Fukumori Masatake.
With the burden off his shoulders, even the familiar sight of the round pillars must look different to him.
Going for a walk early in the morning has become a daily routine.
Now that he has his freedom, for the past six or seven years he has been spending two months a year in the suburbs of London making pottery using local clay.
That's really interesting.

This time, Ippodo will have pottery made from Iga clay and British clay on display together.
Remembering Shirozu Jiro, with whom he drank Scotch whisky, Masatake Fukumori has now come to Ginza with his pottery, calligraphy and paintings.

Keiko Aono

福森正武

Masatake Fukumori

Biography
Born in 1944 as the seventh generation potter of the Doraku Kiln in Iga Maruhashira
1994 Solo exhibition at Yoshii Gallery, Ginza
1996 Solo exhibition at Takashimaya Namba, Osaka
2003 Solo exhibition at YOSHI PARIS (France)
2008 Solo exhibition at Utsuwaya (Tokyo)
2009 Solo exhibition at Galerie Wada (Kyoto)
2011 Solo exhibition at Gallery Yamahon, Kyoto (Kyoto)
2012 Solo exhibition at Takashimaya, Kyoto
2015 Solo exhibition at Gallery Zushiya (Tokyo) 2021
2016 Solo exhibition at Art De Kato (Tokyo) held together with the Doraku Exhibition
Solo exhibition at Takashimaya Osaka in 2016.
2017 Solo exhibition at Kingendo (Sendai)
2020 Solo exhibition at Ryukoin Temple, Daitokuji (Kyoto)

Main publications
1993 Mountain Trees and Flowers (Kannashi Shobo)
1999 Toraku Food Raku (Bunka Publishing Bureau)
2001 Doraku Karaku (Bunka Publishing Bureau)
2016 Food and Living in Doraku (Ie no Hikari Association)
2021 Travels Masatake Fukumori's Flowers (Ichinsha)

See about Masatake Fukumori