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- handmade culture: raku potters, patrons, and tea practitioners in japan (university of hawaii press, 2005)
- "tea taste: patronage and collaboration among tea masters and potters in early modern japan," early modern japan: an interdisciplinary journal (fall, 2004)
- japanese tea culture: art, history, and practice (routledgecurzon, 2003), editor and author
- "sadô ni okeru tezukuri no imi, [the meaning of the handmade in tea culture], kumakura Isao, ed., yûgei bunka to dentô [the culture and tradition of the arts of play] (yoshikawa bunko, 2003).
- kinsei ni okeru rakuyaki dentô no keisei, [the structure of tradition in early modern raku ceramics] nomura bijutsukan kiyô (spring, 2000).
forthcoming publications:
current research:
- researching and writing a new monograph, tentatively titled Shogun, Deity, National Hero: Tokugawa Ieyasu and Japanese Material Culture
- organizing an edited, multiauthor volume, tentatively titled Alternative Histories of the Samurai: Cultural and Social Practices of "Warriors" in Premodern Japan
web articles:
professional:
links:
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japanese ceramics links
email me with suggestions
- anagama, Shiho Kanzaki's anagama (tunnel kiln) and personal version of the history of the anagama in Japan.
- bizen medianet shopping center, Images, historical information, and ordering info. A very bad English translation.
- clay arts house, information on individual Japanese potters, on 3 regional styles (Imari, Arita, and Onta), links, and more.
- dai ichi arts, contemporary ceramics by Japanese and American artists.
- e-yakimono, Robert Yellin's website of ceramics information
- guinomi, Profiles of artists, good images, intros to different ceramic styles.
- haniwa, from the L.A. County Museum
- iga, A short intro to Iga ceramics, a well known wood-fired Japanese ware.
- japan window ceramics page, Provides an excellent introduction to 20 ceramic styles in Japan.
- japanesepottery.com, Robert Yellin's online store selling ceramics and art catalogues.
- kiyomizu pottery, Sections on history and "making" with near unintelligible English but good images.
- nabeshima ware, from the L.A. County Museum.
- neolithic japanese ceramics, from the L.A. County Museum.
- niigata prefectural museum, with lots of Jomon-related info
- ogata kenzan, from the L.A County Museum.
- porcelains for the japanese feudal lords, from the L.A. County Museum.
- the prehistoric archeology of japan
- raku ceramics, from the Raku Museum in Kyoto; nice design and images, but little information and a bad translation.
- saka kouraizaemon, famous potter from old lineage in Hagi
- shiro otani, One of the best known potters working in the Shigaraki tradition, from artist potters.
- tokoname, This site quotes books about ceramics (with some images) to construct a very strange and at times outdated narrative about Tokoname ceramics.
- tokoname ware, from the L.A. County Museum.
ceramic hubs:
exhibitions:
publications
For more information on East Asian Archaeology, contact the Society for East Asian Archeology. SEAA maintains a newsletter and an Internet listserver. To subscribe, contact Professor Nathan Sivin at nsivin@mail.sas.upenn.edu
For more information on Asian Ceramics, subscribe to the ACRO (Asian Ceramics Research Organization) newsletter. Contact Chuimei Ho at ho@fmppr.fmnh.org or Bennet Bronson at bronson@fmppr.fmnh.org
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