Financial Times Weekend 22-23Feb2020

(Dana P.) #1
10 ★ FTWeekend 22 February/23 February 2020

House Home


I


foundmyfirstpiecewhileIwasona
bad date — a very bad date. I had
just moved to Tokyo for a year and,
keen to meet people, agreed to go
with him to a flea market on the
city’soutskirts.
I noticed an octagonal bowl with a
blue-and-white chrysanthemum pat-
tern,mass-producedbutstillpretty,
laidoutonablanketamongthe
potsandvasesonthefloor.The
elderly woman selling wanted
Y500 (£3.50) for it, and I was
about to buy it when my date
dragged me off to scour the
racks of Y100 vintage T-shirts.
Andscourwedid,spendingmore
than an hour looking at my 1990s
wardrobe.
The bowl was still there
when we got back to the stall,
but my date insisted on bar-
gaining the woman down by
Y100. That was the last time I
saw him. The bowl and I are
still together.
In fact, it is the bowls and
dishes and cups I have bought
and studied that have shaped
my understanding of Japan,
andmyplaceinit.
I threw a belated house-
warming party two months
after I arrived, crowding my
flat with colleagues, neighbours and
new friends. While neighbours brought

grapes — in Japan, these tend to be an
expensive delicacy — an Australian col-
league gave me a ribbed ceramic vase,
glazed deep green with an inch of plain
clayatthebottom.Itcamewithastory.
She had walked past a craft school
that was giving out items that the pot-
ters had not collected. This particular
vasewasinscribedonthebottom
with a date and two names
separated by a heart symbol,
suggesting a gift for a romance
that did not survive the firing
process. Dating Tokyo style:
Netflix and kiln.
Soon afterwards, I bought
two square vases less than
5cm high. These were deco-
rated withkarakusa, a scrolled
design featuring lines with
small leaves that curve
inwards on themselves. Their
colours were blue andaka,
the auspicious Japanese scar-
let-crimson.
I came across the vases in the
Tokyo Midtown shopping-
office-hotel-food court complex
inRoppongi,afancyareanear
my flat, which is also home to
the Suntory Museum of Art.
This is where I saw the full
measure of the country’s
appreciation of ceramics, and
started to understand what they could
teachmeaboutJapan.

The museum was exhibiting tea-
ware from Mino — an area 185 miles
west of Tokyo — produced during and
after the Momoyama period of the late
16th century. The star exhibit was an
early 17th-century dish, shaped like a
semi circle, pinched to form a dome,
with a handle.
Half the dish was painted with white
plum blossoms against the dark clay,
while the other half, jaggedly separate,
was an abstract lake of uneven green
glaze. That glaze drips off the underside
ofthehandlewithafreshgleam,despite
having been frozen against the handle
for centuries.
To me, this was as radical as if the
potter had pulled it out of a kiln yes-
terday, embodying incompleteness,
roughness, asymmetry, happenstance
— characteristics in art that were

understood and prized in the west
with the advent of modernism in the
early 20th century. But here was a
dish that proved that radical ideas
have run through Japanese culture for
hundreds of years.
In art, I have always enjoyed how
the abstract abuts the figurative; JMW
Turner’s genius was to paint a shifting
metaphysical form, add a ship and call
it the sea. This tendency always
seemed new and alive, and I loved the
surprise of seeing it in domestic
objects in Tokyo.
The pieces embodied a Japanese
stream of thought known aswabi sabi,
usually understood to mean something
like “beauty in imperfection”. But it also
means, as a friend put it, appreciating
“outcome without intention”. The way
the kiln happens to have made the glaze

Beauty in


imperfection


Expat lives| Japanese ceramics and streams of


thought helped FT journalistJosh Speroto start


understanding his adopted country


(Left) Shelves
in Spero’s Tokyo
flat feature the
blue-and-white
chrysanthemum
motif bowl he
bought at a
Tokyo flea
market

Cup by Kyoto-
based potter
Derek Larsen

Spero appreciates the concept of wabi sabi, ‘the way the kiln happens to make the glaze run, or the way life leaves its marks on you’— Yasuyuki Takagi for the FT

FEBRUARY 22 2020 Section:Weekend Time: 19/2/2020 - 18: 03 User: rosalind.sykes Page Name: RES10, Part,Page,Edition: RES, 10, 1

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