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Last Days of Koichiro Isezaki: Clay in Flow at Ippodo Gallery

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Installation view, Koichiro Isezaki: Clay in Flow

Koichiro Isezaki: Clay in Flow
Closing Saturday, October 11, 2025
35 N Moore Street, NYC

Don’t miss Koichiro Isezaki: Clay in Flow, an exquisite solo exhibition at Ippodo Gallery, before it closes! The show features 50 of the celebrated Bizen ceramicist’s works, including his iconic (‘conception’) series, alongside chawan (tea bowls), mizusashi (water jars), and hanaire (flower vases). Hailing from generations of Bizen artists who preserved stores of the precious regional Okayama clay, Isezaki creates work that flows along the currents of tradition with a contemporary language entirely his own. 

Isezaki contemplates the origins of tsuchi (‘earth’) as the distinctly wet, fine, and nebarike (‘viscous’) clay comes into his hands. Bizen-yaki, one of Japan’s Six Ancient Kilns, is cultivated by centuries of masters, among them the artist’s grandfather Yozan—a leading 20th century sculptor—and his father Jun, the current Living National Treasure.

Though Bizen styles vary, all ceramics from the region are fired in the anagama tunnel-kiln for ten-or-more-day periods, which is fed with cut logs every quarter hour to maintain an intense fire. Koichiro Isezaki’s perspective is an accumulation of history left behind in the clay by his forebearers. He cares deeply for the local history of the earth and its unique properties therein.

Isezaki begins a new creation by pulverizing blocks of hardened clay from the family cache, which he then reconstitutes as mud blocks. Once he pugs the clay to refine its impurities, he takes the shape produced by the machine as his starting point to slump, shape, or otherwise manipulate. Isezaki has established signature and distinct forms: he throws the damon and pulse vases against ridged stone to cast shapes in the surface of the clay. He molds tea bowls by hand and then cuts them with wire to create sharp, bold faces that recapitulate the classic bowl. Finally, he models the  sculptures—inspired by the appearance of a pregnant woman—from large clay cylinders into rolls and folds as if sculpted by the rise and fall of a gentle breath.

The merit of Isezaki’s works was recognized in 2022 when he was awarded the prestigious top prize by the Japan Ceramic Society, and his work is in the public collection of the National Crafts Museum, Kanazawa. Glenn Adamson—curator, writer and historian who previously served as Director of the Museum of Arts and Design and Head of Research at the V&A—contributed his essay, “Slow Dance: Kōichiro Isezaki” to commemorate the exhibition.

Be sure to experience these sublime pieces soon!

To learn more, click here.

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