• Exhibitions
  • biography

    One of the most gifted potters active in Japan today, Tsujimura Shirô has a tremendous range of both glazes and forms. Influenced by Momoyama era aesthetics, he creates powerful functional vessels that are dramatic, sensual and highly unique. Unlike most of his contemporaries, who closely control the firing process, Tsujimura delights in the unexpected and incorporates chance into his creative process.

    1947 Born in Gosei, Nara
    1965 Left for Tokyo to prepare for art college entrance examinations intending to become a painter but became disillusioned with the process and abandoned the idea. Thereafter, he traveled throughout northern Japan. He was inspired to become a ceramist upon seeing a classic Ido teabowl at the Japan Folk Craft Museum.
    1966- 68 Resided at Sanshôji (Zen temple), Nara
    1967 Bought a plot of land in the hills above the city of Nara in Mima, Nara
    Built workshop, teahouse, and seven kilns in the following seven years. Began his independent study of ceramics.


    Solo exhibitions:

    1977 First show at his home
    1978 Mitsukoshi, Osaka (also in 1980 and 1981)
    1981 Yamaha Gallery, Kichijôji, Tokyo (also in 1982)
    Painting show Gallery Watchi, Ginza, Tokyo
    1983 Mitsukoshi Department Store Gallery, Tokyo (thereafter biannually)
    Painting show, Matsuzakaya Department Store Gallery, Nihonbashi, Tokyo
    1984 Maruei Department Store Gallery, Nagoya, Aichi (thereafter biannually)
    1985 Hankyû Department Store Gallery, Osaka (also in 1987, 1988, 1991, 1992, 1993, and 1996)
    1986 Mitsukoshi Department Store Gallery, Matsuyama, Ehime (also in 1988)
    1987 Yamatoyashiki Gallery, Himeji, Hyôgo
    1988 Itô Gallery, Nagoya (also in 1991)
    1990 Tachikichi, Kyoto (also in 1992, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, and 2001)
    1992 Mitsukoshi Department Store Gallery, Yokohama, Kanagawa
    1993 Kuse Gallery, Gifu (also in 1996)
    Solo show at Japan Art, Frankfurt (also in 1994)
    1994 Solo show at Gallery Besson, London
    1995 Solo show at Nihonbashi Mitsukoshi, Tokyo
    1996 Yû Gallery, Akasaka, Tokyo
    Maruei, Nagoya (also in 2001)
    Maruei, Toyohashi (also in 2001)
    Umeda Hankyû in Osaka
    1997 Mitsukoshi Department Store Gallery, Nihonbashi, Tokyo
    Tachikichi Main Store
    1999 Tsujimura Shirô; Jars and Teabowls, Chadô Shiryôkan, Kyoto
    2001 Tachikichi, Kyoto
    Tenmaya Okayama
    Galery Maruei, Nagoya
    2002 Hankyu Department Store Gallery, Osaka

    2003 Mitsukoshi Department Store Gallery, Nihonbashi, Tokyo
    Tachikichi Kyoto
    Yanagi Oriental Fine Art (again 2006)


    Group exhibitions:

    1984 Presented fifty white slipware teabowls at MOA Museum, Atami
    1992 Vier Elemente Drei Länder, Museum für Kunsthandwerk Frankfurt am Main, Ausstellung, Germany
    1999 Ceramic Show, Frankfurt, Germany
    2000 Painting exhibition, Matsuzakaya Art Gallery, Nihonbashi, Tokyo
    2005 Exhibited and published, Fascination of Ceramics, Masterpieces of Modern Japanese Pottery from the Gisela Freudenberg Collection, Museum für Angewandte Kunst Frankfurt, Germany p. 182-191
    Exhibited and published, Contemporary Clay: Japanese ceramics for the new century, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA


    Selection of Public Collections:

    Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio
    Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
    Museum of Arts of Kansas University
    Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, New York
    Frankfurt Craft Museum, Germany
    Stockholm Museum of Art, Sweden
    Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA



    Selected references:

    Hayashiya Seizô, "Chûmoku no gendai tôgeika jûnin [Ten emerging talent in contemporary ceramics} Taiyô (Heibonsha, 1990): 42-43.

    Toh; Tsujimura Shirô , Vol.40, Kyoto Shoin, 1992.

    "Tsujimura Shirô; A Yakishime Ascetic," Toward a 21st Century Renaissance in Ceramics, vol. 1, Dôhôsha, 1997, pp. 153- 179.

    Tsujimura Shiro; Jars and Teabowls. Chadô Shiryôkan, 1999.

    "Nine Ceramic Artists selected by Hayashiya Seizô," Waraku, no. 21, 2001, pp. 86- 89.

    Joe Earle, Contemporary Clay: Japanese ceramics for the new century, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA, 2005, pp. 10-13

  • Tsujimura Shirō

    Tsujimura Shirō

  • bio pt 1

    bio pt 1

    Born 1947, Gosei, Nara, Japan

    One of the most gifted potters active in Japan today, TSUJIMURA SHIRŌ has a tremendous range of both glazes and forms. Influenced by Momoyama era tea aesthetics, he creates powerful functional vessels that are dramatic, sensual and highly unique. Unlike most of his contemporaries, who closely control the firing process, Tsujimura delights in the unexpected and incorporates chance into his creative process. His work populates the collections of museums throughout the world.