The public is invited to the following lecture. A 1,000 yen donation from non-members would be appreciated, but is not required.

Place: OAG House auditorium (the German Cultural Center), behind Sogetsu Kaikan on Aoyama-dori near Aoyama-ichome.

Information: TEL (03)3586-1548


Asiatic Society of Japan
September 21, 1998 (Monday, 6:30 p.m.)
Speaker: Dr. Richard L. Wilson
Subject: Ogata Kenzan: Ceramics and Design in Early Modern Japan

Ogata Kenzan (1663-1743) was steeped in the literary and artistic traditions of Japan and China. While his pottery bears influences from calligraphy and painting, at the same time his ceramics have an unfinished, amateurish touch that have endeared them to admirers right down to the present. Over four decades, the Kenzan workshops, located in Kyoto and later in Edo, produced a diverse line of wares that testified to the urban demand for fine goods that repackaged images of classical court culture for upwardly mobile townspeople.

The admiration elicited by Kenzan wares encouraged imitations, the study of which sheds light on the original works and highlights shifts in taste after Kenzan's death. At present, developments in urban archaeology and scientific analysis are opening up a new frontier in Kenzan studies.

In Japan the idea of the artistically gifted potter has become commonplace, but Kenzan was the first. His work brings high-culture images into humble vessels: a meeting of heaven and earth. If there is an essential Japanese aesthetic, the designs of Ogata Kenzan must be close to it.


Dr. Richard L. Wilson is a Professor of Art and Archeology as well as Director of Japan Studies at International Christian University. He is the author of many books and articles, in English and Japanese, on Ogata Kenzan and Japanese ceramics.


Material submitted by Dr. Joshua Dale.


Return to the ASJ 1998 lecture schedule