




Masaaki Iwasa 26-01
For bulk orders, sizing, textures, availability, or other requests, please contact our
Description
A wide, folded vessel in Iwasa's toutai shitsuki (ceramic lacquerware) technique, its exterior surface warm and burnished, catching light differently from every angle. Where the metal leaf has pooled and pulled away during firing, a landscape of fine cracks, scattered marks, and dark voids opens across the surface, each one unrepeatable. A piece that reads as both ancient and immediate, equally at home as a statement object on a shelf or holding a single stem.
Details
Material: Ceramic
Country of Origin: Japan
Care
- Not intended for microwave or dishwasher use.
- Hand wash only with neutral detergent and a soft sponge or cloth to preserve overglaze colors and decorative finishes. Avoid abrasive scrubbers, scouring pads, and cleansers.
Shipping & Delivery
This is a one-of-a-kind piece and will not be restocked once sold out.
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Masaaki Iwasa 26-01
We're here to help. For questions about bulk orders, sizes, finishes, custom gifts, or anything else, please submit an inquiry.Shop Masaaki Iwasa 岩佐昌昭
About Masaaki Iwasa 岩佐昌昭
Masaaki Iwasa leads two lives in Izumo, Shimane Prefecture: as head priest of Tokuen Temple, a Rinzai Zen monastery with over three hundred years of history, and as a ceramic artist whose work is inseparable from that practice. Born in Ehime Prefecture in 1979, he spent nearly a decade apprenticing under master potters in Japan before establishing his kiln in Izumo in 2013.
His signature technique, toutai shitsuki (ceramic lacquerware), applies lacquer as an adhesive for metal leaf onto fired ceramic vessels, which are then refired at several hundred degrees. Where the metal adheres and burns away, a landscape emerges on the surface, quiet, unpredictable, and unrepeatable. Each piece develops its own patina over time, shifting in tone and texture with age, a quality he traces to a life spent among ancient temple objects whose gold and silver leaf has grown more beautiful over centuries.









































































































