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Tamba Ware Large Faceted Mug Ash Glaze Light Blue

Sale price$69.00

Of the glazes Shozo Gama applies to this form, the light blue ash is perhaps the most unguarded. Soft periwinkle and chalk white move across the faceted surface in broad, overlapping passages, neither fully contained within each carved plane nor entirely indifferent to it. Fine iron lines trace the ridges where the clay was cut, offering the only fixed points in an otherwise fluid composition. The base clay asserts itself at the foot, warm and unglazed, grounding a surface that might otherwise feel weightless. Ash glazes of this kind have a long history in Tamba's ceramic tradition, their particular softness inseparable from the wood-firing conditions that the kilns of Hyogo Prefecture have sustained for over 800 years. Wide and low, the form is unchanged from the others in this series. What changes is the mood, and here it is considered and still.

A wide, low Tamba ware mug by Shozo Gama with diagonal hand carved facets covered in soft periwinkle blue and chalk white ash glaze with fine iron lines along the ridges, a pale loop handle, and an unglazed dark foot, photographed against a white background.
Tamba Ware Large Faceted Mug Ash Glaze Light Blue Sale price$69.00

Meet the Artisan

Shozo Gama

Shozo Gama stands on the northern edge of Tachikui, the historic pottery village of Tamba Sasayama, set on elevated ground where the workshop and gallery open onto the seasonal mountain landscape of Hyogo Prefecture. Here, surrounded by the unhurried rhythms of the Tamba hills, Ichino Motokazu and his son Ichino Shusaku work within one of Japan's most enduring ceramic traditions, shaping each piece entirely by hand from local Tamba clay.

Shusaku Ichino, the third generation of the kiln's practice, has developed a voice that is at once rooted in tradition and quietly forward-looking. Working with wood-fired kilns and ash glazes that shift and deepen through the firing, he pursues the powerful, grounded character that defines the finest Tamba ware, while bringing his own considered sensibility to form and surface. The result is work that carries the weight of 800 years of craft without being bound by it.

From tea bowls and flower vessels to tableware made for daily use, every piece that leaves Shozo Gama reflects the same conviction: that the most meaningful objects are those shaped with patience, fired with intention, and made to belong in the hands and on the tables of those who will use them.