Produced by a pre-war cultural organization in Japan, the film is a work of great clarity and beauty which follows an entire pottery-making cycle as performed in Japan for centuries. Mashiko ceramic manufacture is said to date back to 1853. Also shown at work is the great painter of teapots, Masu Minagawa, an itinerant, illiterate painter of patterns who travelled amongst the kilns in villages. It is said that she decorated up to one thousand teapots per day. Some of her very rare drawings on paper are now held at the Fogg Art Museum in Massachusetts. The film was restored for re-release by Marty Gross.
Mashiko Village Pottery, Japan 1937
- Film Maker
- Gross, Marty
- Year
- 1937
- Country
- Canada
- Language
- Format
- 16mm
- Length
- 20
- Genre
- documentary
- Category
- art & artists, Asian, history, Race + Ethnicity


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