Shoji Hamada
Shoji Hamada
Pitcher, stoneware, iron brushwork of grape motifs
Period
c.1930
Size
Length9.8×Width13×Height11cm

In the early Showa era, Shoji Hamada, who had come back to Japan after three years in Britain, created this work for use at Mikuni-so in Osaka. Reflecting his time spent in Britain, he freely depicted the forms of grapes through an iron glaze. Creating the latest kind of vessel, a milk pitcher, shows Hamada's endeavors to find the objects regular people will use daily in the new age.