• Exhibitions
  • biography

    As the leading artist working in traditional Bizen techniques, Mori Togaku has been at the forefront of the Japanese ceramic art world for more than thirty years. He completed an extraordinary large semi-underground climbing kiln, where most of his work has been produced, and is now undertaking the near-impossible task of recreating an even larger Momoyama-style kiln. Influenced by ancient Bizen and its Chinese prototypes, such as Sue ware, he highly values the texture of clay and sometimes combines two or three different kinds of clay to create unique vessels that are both dramatically modern while also reflecting old traditions.

    1937 Born in Imbe, Bizen, Okayama Prefecture
    1957 Graduated from the art program, Okayama University
    Assigned to teach at a junior high school in Takino, Hyogo Prefecture
    1962 Left teaching to become a potter
    1996 Featured in "Ceramics Hunt" (Yakimono Tambo) NHK TV special program
    1999 "Ancient Bizen Rediscovered- Mori Tôgaku" featured on NHK television Sunday morning show
    Featured in NHK Saturday arts program

    Awards:
    1969 Awarded prize by the Japan Ceramics Society
    1996 Became an Important Cultural Property of Okayama Prefecture
    Sanyô Newspaper Cultural Award
    2002 Japanese Ceramic Society Award

    Solo exhibitions:
    1966 Tokyo Kôtsû Kaikan Hall, Tokyo (also in 1968)
    1968 Gallery Te, Tokyo
    1974 Isetan Department Store Gallery, Tokyo
    1983 Akasaka Green Gallery, Tokyo
    1984 Akasaka Green Gallery, Tokyo
    1985 Akasaka and Minami Aoyama Green Galleries, Tokyo
    1986 Seibu Department Store Gallery, Ikebukuro, Tokyo
    Temmaya Department Store gallery, Okayama
    1992 Gallery Fred Jan, Munich
    1994 Mitsukoshi Department Store gallery, Tokyo (also in 1997)
    Seibu Art Forum, Tokyo
    Akasaka Green Gallery, Tokyo
    Mitsukoshi Department Store Gallery, Osaka
    Matsuzakaya Department Store Gallery, Nagoya
    1995 Toyoike Museum, Okayama (also in 1996)
    Tenmaya, Hiroshima and Okayama
    1996 Maruei Department Store Gallery, Nagoya
    Akasaka Green Gallery, Tokyo
    Tenmaya, Okayama
    1997 Mori Tôgaku in Celebration of his 60th Birthday, Tenmaya, Okayama
    Akasaka Green Gallery, Tokyo
    1998 Mitsukoshi Department STore Gallery, Niigata
    1999 Akasaka Green Gallery, Tokyo

    Group exhibitions:
    1968 New Generation of Contemporary Ceramics Exhibition, National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo and Kyoto
    1970 Contemporary Ceramics: Europe and Japan Exhibition, National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto
    1971 Entry to the Japan Ceramic Art Exhibition (also in 1973, 1975, 1977)
    Contemporary Ceramics: America, Canada, Mexico, and Japan Exhibition, National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto
    1972 Annual show at Minami Aoyama Green Gallery in Tokyo
    1984 Exhibited at Ginza Mune Crafts, Tokyo
    1987 Exhibited at Akasaka and Minami Aoyama Green Galleries, Tokyo
    Exhibited tablewares at Ikebukuro Seibu Department Store
    1989 Exhibited at Akasaka Green Gallery (also in 1990, 1991), Tokyo
    1991 Exhibited at Craft Gallery Tekona, Nagoya
    1992 Exhibited at Maruzen, Nagoya
    Exhibited teabowls and water containers at Minami Aoyama Green Gallery
    1993 The 8th Contemporary Arts Exhibition
    Invited to the 12th Japanese Ceramic Art Exhibition (thereafter biannually)
    1994 The 9th Contemporary Arts Exhibition
    Two-man show at Jun’i Art Museum in Niigata
    1995 The 10th Contemporary Arts Exhibition (thereafter annually)
    Contemporary Japanese Jars, Saitama Modern Art Museum
    1997 Ceramics Hunt Exhibition, organized by NHK
    Bizen wares; 1000 years of Tradition, National Ceramic Museum in France, traveling exhibition to Osaka, Tokyo, Hiroshima, Okayama
    1998 The 20th Century World Ceramics Exhibition, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and one of his pieces was acquired by the museum
    1999 Exhibition at Daimaru Museum, Tokyo, Kyoto, Hiroshima and Nara, sponsored by Asahi Newspaper
    2002 Two-man show with Suzuki Goro, Wako Tokyo in celebration of their receiving the prestigious Japanese Ceramic Society Award
    2005 Exhibited and published, Contemporary Clay: Japanese ceramics for the new century, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
    2006 Tôji: Avant-Garde et Tradition de la Cèramique Japonaise, Musèe national de cèramique Sèvres, France
    2009 Three-person exhibition, Kamoda Shôji, Ezaki Issei and Mori Tôgaku, Shibuya Kuroda Tôen, Tokyo
    2010 The 10th the 21st Century Exhibition of Japanese Art, Tokyo Bijutsu Club (traveled to Kyoto, Kanazawa, Toyama and Osaka)

    Selected References:
    Mori Tôgaku: Toh, vol. 49 (Kyoto Shoin, 1992)

    “Mori Tôgaku: Our Ceramic Artists II; 40th Anniversary Commemorative feature 4,” Honoho Geijutsu, vol. 41 (Abe Shuppan, 1995), pp. 30- 33, 51

    “Bizen; Recommending Drinking Vessels,” Honoho Geijutsu, vol. 53 (Abe Shuppan, 1998), pp.12- 13

    Robert Yellin, “Mori Tôgaku: Contemporary Ceramics,” Daruma, vol. 19, summer 1998, pp. 36- 39

    Robert Yellin, “Ceramic Scene; Quality so good you can smell it,” The Japan Times, Saturday, July 10, 1999, p. 15

    Robert Yellin, “Ceramic Scene; Holding the stars in your hands,” The Japan Times, Saturday, September 25, 1999, p.15

    Kobizen o koete--Mori Tôgaku, Asahi Shinbunsha, 1999

    “Mori Tôgaku: A New Century of Ceramics. The Creation of a New Modernity and Tradition,” Honoho Geijutsu, vol. 63 (Abe Shuppan, 2000), pp. 12- 19

    “Tôgeika no kama: Mori Tôgaku [Master’s Kiln].” Tôjirô 23 (Futabasha, 2000): pp. 25-27

    Exhibition catalogue, Contemporary Clay: Japanese ceramics for the new century, (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2005): pp.74-75

    Wege zur Japanischen Keramik: Tradition in der Gegenwart, Museum für Ostasiatische Kunst zu Berlin, 2005

    Christine Shimizu, Tôji: Avant-Garde et Tradition de la Cèramique Japonaise, Editions de la rèunion des musèes nationaux, Paris, 2006

    Nihon Tôgei-ten (Japan Ceramic Art Exhibition 2009), Tokyo: Mainichi Shimbun, 2009: pp. 52

  • Mori Tōgaku

    Mori Tōgaku

  • video

  • bio pt 1

    bio pt 1

    Born 1937, Imbe, Bizen, Okayama Prefecture, Japan

    As the leading artist working in traditional Bizen techniques, MORI TŌGAKU has been at the forefront of the Japanese ceramic art world for more than thirty years. In 1985, he completed an extraordinarily large semi-underground climbing kiln, where most of his work has been produced. In 2015, he completed an even larger 85-meter Momoyama-style climbing kiln, where he has begun firing new pieces. This completely wood-powered kiln is unprecedented in size, and demonstrates the spirit of his work well. While he remains deeply rooted in traditional styles and techniques, his work pushes beyond the boundaries of the past. Influenced by ancient Bizen ware and its Chinese prototypes, such as Sue ware, he highly values the texture of clay and sometimes combines two or three different kinds of clay to create vessels that are both dramatically modern and reflective of old tradition.

  • bio pt 2

    bio pt 2

    Selected Public Collections:

    Ackland Art Museum, Chapel Hill NC
    Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
    Brooklyn Museum, NY
    Fairfield University Art Museum, CT
    Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia, Athens, GA
    Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Ithaca, NY
    Johnson Museum of Art, Ithaca, NY
    Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY
    Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA
    National Museum of Asian Art, Washington, D.C.
    National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto, Japan
    National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, Japan
    Tsurui Museum of Art, Japan
    Victoria & Albert Museum, London, UK
    Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT