
Shoji Kamoda Pointing to the Celestial Pole 55th Anniversary of Sano Museum of Art and 80th Anniversary of Mishima City

We will be holding an exhibition of works by the ceramic artist Kamoda Shoji (1933-1983), who left a significant mark on the history of modern Japanese ceramics with his genius for creating works and outstanding technique.
Kamoda was born in Kishiwada, Osaka Prefecture, and studied under the ceramist Tomimoto Kenkichi at Kyoto City University of Arts (now Kyoto City University of Arts). In 1959, he opened a kiln in Mashiko, Tochigi Prefecture, and became independent. There, he pursued the expression of ash and iron glazes, and in 1967, he became the only ceramist to receive the Takamura Kotaro Award. In 1969, he moved to Tono, Iwate Prefecture, and the following year, he shocked the ceramics world with his "Curved Carved Pattern" series, and the year after that, he turned his attention to "Colored Pottery," using colors such as vermilion, green, and white, and continued to produce works energetically, changing his style as he went on.
This exhibition will display approximately 100 pieces, focusing on masterpieces from Kamoda's early period to his later years, particularly from his Mashiko period to his early Tono period, when he made his breakthrough as an artist.
What did Kamoda, who passed away at the young age of 49, want to express using the material "ceramic"? We believe that among his diverse works, we can find the one and only "Tenkyoku" that Kamoda aimed for.
Outline
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Admission fee
Adults and university students: 1,100 yen; elementary, middle and high school students: 550 yen
* Free admission for those aged 65 and over on Respect for the Aged Day, Monday, September 20th (National Holiday)
*Free admission for elementary and junior high school students on Saturdays
*20% discount for groups of 15 or more -
Opening hours
10:00-17:00 (entrance accepted until 16:30) -
Closed
Thursdays (open on September 23rd) -
Organizer
Sano Art Museum, Mishima City, Mishima City Board of Education, Daiichi-TV -
Sponsored by
Shizuoka Prefectural Board of Education -
Sponsorship
Izuhakone Railway Co., Ltd. -
Supervisor
Mashiko Ceramic Art Museum -
Production Cooperation
NHK Enterprises Chubu
Simultaneous Exhibition
The Basics of Swords: Changing Inscriptions
[Exhibited works]
・Tanto Inscription: Nagakashi Hikaru/October, Eijin 3rd year, Kamakura period (1295)
・Sword, unsigned, Nagayoshi, from the Northern and Southern Courts period
・Tachi folded inscription Ryokai Kamakura period
・Wakizashi with inscription Sadamasa, Kamakura period
・Katana, gold inlay inscription, one character/Hon'a (signature), Kamakura period
All exhibited works are from the Sano Museum of Art