Copper Matte Raku Vase
Description
This raku vase is wheel-thrown and has a matte copper glaze applied. There are some very interesting color variations. Note: as with all raku fired pottery, this vase is porous and will slowly seep water through its pores. You can insert a glass inside of it to hold water if you want to use it for flowers.Shipped gift ready!
Dimensions: 3.5 inches at the widest part and about 5 inches high
About the Raku Process-
Raku Pottery was developed in Japan over 400 years ago as the Ceremonial Tea Ware of the Zen Buddhist Masters. It was preferred by the Masters because of its humility, its tasteful unpretentiousness, its simple naturalness, and its deliberate avoidance of luxury . . . all very intrinsic to the Zen philosophy.
According to the Zen Masters, its elusive, subtle, yet vigorous beauty is Raku's only worth. It is valued because it is believed that the Spirit of the Maker is embodied in the form and revealed at the foot, which is traditionally left naked (unglazed). It is believed that if we are alert to ourselves, in contemplating the Raku form, we will recognize in it our own Spirit and Meaning.
Raku Pottery is earth derived . . . the firing process is unique and daring, and in the eyes of the Zen Masters, the process truly reflects the most fundamental rhythm of enlightened life.
What is practiced today in the United States is a western variation of raku process developed by Paul Soldner and others in the 1960s.
To begin the process, a bisque fired piece is coated with a glaze and placed directly into a raku kiln and brought up to 1,800 to 2,000 degrees F. It is this first tremendous heat shock which often causes a pot to explode or to develop large "body cracks" in the clay walls. If the vessel survives this shock, almost immediate metamorphosis begins. Within just minutes the entire vessel glows like a red-hot coal, and the "glaze-paste" melts into a sheet of liquid glass.
At this point the pot must endure a second shock as the potter uses tongs to remove the glowing mass from the inferno. As the cool air outside the kiln hits the glowing vessel, the severe temperature change produces the cracks in the glaze. These cracks are highly prized as characteristic of traditional Raku Pottery—they are the "proof-marks" of the earthenware's having survived this dramatic trial by fire.
Upon leaving the kiln, the glowing pot is placed directly into an airtight container filled with combustibles; leaves, pine needles, or the like, which immediately burst into flame and produce smoke. It is the trapped carbon from this smoke which turns the naked clay foot black and highlights the valuable cracks in the glaze.
As if all this were not enough, when the colors are deemed "just right," the vessel (often still over 1,000 degrees F) may then be plunged into cold water to halt the process.
With the cooling of the piece, the cycle of earth, fire, air and water is complete.
Added on Nov 07, 2009
Shipping
Item ships from: United States
| ship to: | cost: | with another item: |
|---|---|---|
| United States | $5.00 USD | $1.00 USD |
Payment methods
elmstudios accepts the following forms of payment:
- Money Order
- Check
- Other (see description)
Got a question about this item?
$30.00 USD
1 in stock
elmstudios's info
seller's other items
favorites
page tools
- Subscribe to shop feed
-
You reported this item
stats
Listed on Nov 07, 2009
Listing # 27457843
383 views
2 hearts
$30.00 USD
1 in stock








