Kondō Takahiro (Japanese, born 1958), Reduction I, porcelain with blue and green underglazes and "silver mist" overglaze. The P.D. McMillan Memorial Fund, 2014.64, © Kondō Takahiro

Transcendent Clay: The Kondō Family’s Path of Porcelain Innovations

Transcendent Clay: The Kondō Family’s Path of Porcelain Innovations

March 1, 2024 - September 7, 2024
Gallery 251, 252, 253
Free Exhibition

Spanning almost a century of creativity, “Transcendent Clay” offers a panoramic look at the achievements of the Kondō family of ceramicists based in Kyoto, Japan. The legacy of porcelain-making began with Kondō Yūzō (1902–1985) in the 1930s and continued with his sons Yutaka (1932–1983) and Hiroshi (1936–2012), who broke free to pursue original, individual expressions. Ultimately it was the grandson Takahiro (born 1958) who emerged as the family’s greatest innovator by developing the secret technique of applying a “silver mist” (gintekisai) of metallic droplets to his modern forms.

This exhibition brings together a wide range of works including freehand-painted vases, pure-white jars, and Takahiro’s dramatic shapes and textures, which he describes as “water born from fire.” Most of the works are from the collection of Carol and Jeffrey Horvitz, long-time supporters of Mia.

Kondō Takahiro (Japanese, born 1958), Reduction I, porcelain with blue and green underglazes and "silver mist" overglaze. The P.D. McMillan Memorial Fund, 2014.64, © Kondō Takahiro