Friday, August 30, 2013

Daikoku The Transformer

Daikoku The Transformer

Please let me introduce you to Daikoku, one of Japan's Seven Lucky Gods. He is the God of wealth, farmers, food and good fortune. I took this photo at Kiyomizudera in Kyoto where he greets visitors to his shrine. I was enchanted by the way the light caught in his wish granting jewel and intensified the lanterns behind him.

Daikoku is a deity of the kitchen and a provider of food. I've seen small statues and printed images of him in the kitchens of restored inns along the Tokaido. Today you can find him on key chains, decals to decorate your phone and advertisements. It's not surprising that he's a favorite of mine, since I must eat five times a day. But it's also ironic because I don't like to cook. Thank goodness Steve loves to create his "jazz" recipes.

Jolly, welcoming Daikoku originated in India as a Hindu warrior god, an avatar of Shiva. Like so many Hindu gods, Buddhism adopted him into its pantheon, where he remained a fierce soldier for centuries. But in Japan things changed in the fifteenth century.

Japanese artwork began to show him as a cheerful and pudgy deity wearing a peasant's hat and standing on bales of rice, carrying a large sack of treasure slung over his shoulder and holding a small magic mallet. Daikoku's mallet of plenty can miraculously produce anything desired when struck. Wouldn't you love to have one?

For lots more information and photos:
<http://www.onmarkproductions.com/html/daikoku.shtml>http://www.onmarkproductions.com/html/daikoku.shtml

Helen Rindsberg
http://helenrindsberg.com/
http://helenrindsberg.blogspot.com/

Thursday, August 22, 2013

The Monkey That Saved Rookwood

Thanks to Jim Robinson, Artist and Chemist at Rookwood Pottery

This humble ceramic monkey saved a once great company. Kataro Shirayamadani, a Japanese artist, created it as a small knick knack for the Rookwood Pottery Company of Cincinnati, OH. Shirayamadani was a leading designer and decorator there for over 50 years. Little did he know the important role it would play in the company's resurrection.

Founded in 1880 the Rookwood Pottery Company was the leader in the American Art Pottery Movement. In 1900 the company won the Grand Prix at the Paris Universal Exposition, marking it as the finest art pottery in the world. Rookwood went on to win the highest prizes at international fairs for many years to come. It continued its successful competition with the great art potteries of Europe through the1920s. Unable to weather the Great Depression of the 1930s, Rookwood struggled in a diminished state until 1967 when it finally closed. (From Anita Ellis, The Cincinnati Wing: The Story of Art in the Queen City, 2003)

In 1982 Michigan dentist and art pottery collector, Dr. Arthur Townley, used his life saving to buy the assets of the company so that it would remain in America. But to retain the intellectual property rights, the company needed to produce a product. He taught his family members to create the monkey using the original plaster molds, then firing and glazing them. Over the years, he turned down many offers to sell the company.

In 2006 after a year of negotiations, Dr. Townley sold the company to investors, returning the trademarks, more than 3,000 original molds and hundreds of glaze recipes used by the original Rookwood Pottery Company it to its home in Cincinnati. You can visit their studio and production facility in Over-The-Rhine and buy your own monkey – in blue, gold, green, brown or black. If you stop in on a Wednesday afternoon,
you can join Jim's weekly tour to see the artists and production team at work. He will amaze you with many more wonderful stories.

Our Japanese friends who see this monkey say the design is straight from Japan, the monkey who sees no evil. How interesting that an unseeing monkey saved a company that produces incredibly visual artworks. You can see many beautiful Rookwood creations at the Cincinnati Art Museum. If you're in town, contact me and I'll give you a tour there.

For more information:
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rookwood_Pottery>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rookwood_Pottery
and (<https://www.rookwood.com/>https://www.rookwood.com/

Helen Rindsberg
http://helenrindsberg.com/
http://helenrindsberg.blogspot.com/

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Clay Unites a Cause

Ikuhiko Shibata and Miya Moore are working together this summer on a very special project. On March 11, 2011, seven year old Miya was enjoying a visit with her relatives from Ishinomaki, Japan. But then the news hit - a great tsunami had crashed into the northern coast of Japan. Ishinomaki was at the center of the destruction. For four days, Miya and her relatives anxiously watched the television, searching for photos of Ishinomaki. For four days, they waited to hear if Miya's grandmother and her family had survived. Finally word arrived. Everyone was alive, but they had lost everything.

About a week later, Miya told her parents, Emiko and Mel, that she wanted to raise money for the people of Ishinomaki. They began the Gaman bracelet project. Gaman means patience and perseverance in Japanese. People who donated $2.00 received a wristband in a beautiful aqua blue embossed with "Gaman." The Moores donated all the money to the American Red Cross Japan Disaster Relief Fund.

In 2012, the Moore family visited Ishinomaki. What had once been grandmother's home and garden was just mud. All around their Matsunami neighborhood, debris had been cleared, thanks to the great efforts of families and volunteers. But now there was mud, blocks and blocks of mud. Roads were cleared with a few lonely foundations. Miya saw that the children needed a place to play. Thus began the Ishinomaki playground Project: http://www.i-playground.org/.

Emiko met two professors at the College of Design, Architecture, Art and Planning at the University of Cincinnati. They adopted the project for their urban planning class. Five teams of students corresponded with volunteers in Ishinomaki and designed playgrounds based on residents' ideas. On March 11, 2013 the surviving members of the Matsunami district selected their preferred design - the Matsunami Mountain. Estimates are in and fund-raising has ramped up.

Ikuhiko Shibata, a seventh generation ceramic artist, learned about the Ishinomaki Playground Project as he was preparing for his artist in residency in Cincinnati, OH. He volunteered to create 500 tea cups and 25 tea bowls to sell. Over 150 have already been sold. Every penny goes to the playground. His host, Funke Fired
Arts donated all the clay, glazes and kiln time. Other volunteers donated graphic design work, packaging and their time to sell the tea cups.

When everything is sold, I'll give you an update on the results. We'll still have more funds to raise, but support for the project grows every day.

Helen Rindsberg
http://helenrindsberg.com/
http://helenrindsberg.blogspot.com/