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Kaneshige Toyo

Daga Wikipedia, Insakulofidiya ta kyauta.
Kaneshige Toyo
Rayuwa
Cikakken suna 金重 勇
Haihuwa Okayama (en) Fassara, 1896
ƙasa Japan
Dai-Nippon Teikoku (mul) Fassara
Mutuwa 1967
Ƴan uwa
Yara
Karatu
Harsuna Harshen Japan
Sana'a
Sana'a ceramicist (en) Fassara da potter (en) Fassara
Kyaututtuka

Kaneshige Toyo (金重 陶陽) (from Okayama, Japan 1896–1967) was a potter in Imbe, Japan.[1] He helped to establish the Japan Kōgei Association in 1955,[2][3][4] and was deemed a living national treasure in 1956 for his work in the Bizen style ceramics.[1] He was a member of what is known as the "Momoyama revival movement" of the 1930s and is credited with having rediscovered the techniques used to produce the wabi teawares of the Azuchi-Momoyama period. [ana buƙatar hujja]

[1]

  1. A prize honoring Kaneshige's contribution has been offered annually by the Chugoku branch, then East Chugoku branch, of the Japan Kōgei Association since 1968. It awards craftspeople of lacquerware, wood craft, weaving and dyeing, and pottery other than Bizen-yaki. Cited from "Yakimono Bizen" (1990-05) Yagyu, Takashi, Sanyo Shimbunsha, Nakamura, Akio (photographs). ISBN 4-88197-315-0. "Kaneshige Toyo-sho (Okayama dejitaru hyakka)" [Kaneshige Toyo Prize (Okayama Digital Encyclopedia)] (in Japanese). Okayama Prefecture Library. Retrieved 2017-10-10.