A cabinet at the Sleeper-McCann House, a Historic New England property in Gloucester, MA, contained five vessels apparently repaired using the Japanese kintsugi method. Kintsugi is a skilled and valued art of mending ceramics using Asian lacquer and sprinkling the joins with precious metals. The repairs are intentionally visible due to the line of gold or silver along the cracks or flaws in the object. The use of precious metals in repairs is meant to convey that the repaired object has its own beauty. A ceramic may be damaged, but mending it gives it new life, and beauty can still be found in imperfection. When this technique is used, it imparts additional value to the object, in terms of both aesthetics and history. Two Western mus...
Pottery was a fundamentally important prehistoric innovation and had revolutionary implications for ...
I am interested in exploring the role of handmade pottery in today\u27s world. Industrialized ceram...
The subject of this qualifying paper is an Edo Period Nō theater chōken. Upon receipt, this choken w...
The Beauty of Kintsugi - Kintsugi is a centuries-old Japanese technique of repairing broken or imper...
In the late nineteen eighties American ceramic artist Rick Dillingham put a new twist on the creatio...
In order to care for your lacquerware, it is helpful to understand what it is and how it is made. La...
East Asian lacquer (urushi) is a natural, thermosetting polymer, characterised by its durability an...
The aim of the work was to devise a methodology to artificially age urushi (Japanese lacquer) sampl...
The aim of the work was to devise a methodology to artificially age urushi (Japanese lacquer) sample...
In spring 2018 I was contacted by a Director of the Mashiko Ceramic Arts Association (MCAA), to disc...
This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-...
Kintsugi identifies the ancient Japanese art of repairing broken pottery using lacquer mixed up wit...
Beyond Preservation was presented at the international Industrial Crafts Research Network (ICRN) Ina...
The examples of Asian paints can be found in many European museums and galleries than one in a castl...
The author gives a short story of the Japanese lacquer, describes the method of its obtaining by inc...
Pottery was a fundamentally important prehistoric innovation and had revolutionary implications for ...
I am interested in exploring the role of handmade pottery in today\u27s world. Industrialized ceram...
The subject of this qualifying paper is an Edo Period Nō theater chōken. Upon receipt, this choken w...
The Beauty of Kintsugi - Kintsugi is a centuries-old Japanese technique of repairing broken or imper...
In the late nineteen eighties American ceramic artist Rick Dillingham put a new twist on the creatio...
In order to care for your lacquerware, it is helpful to understand what it is and how it is made. La...
East Asian lacquer (urushi) is a natural, thermosetting polymer, characterised by its durability an...
The aim of the work was to devise a methodology to artificially age urushi (Japanese lacquer) sampl...
The aim of the work was to devise a methodology to artificially age urushi (Japanese lacquer) sample...
In spring 2018 I was contacted by a Director of the Mashiko Ceramic Arts Association (MCAA), to disc...
This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-...
Kintsugi identifies the ancient Japanese art of repairing broken pottery using lacquer mixed up wit...
Beyond Preservation was presented at the international Industrial Crafts Research Network (ICRN) Ina...
The examples of Asian paints can be found in many European museums and galleries than one in a castl...
The author gives a short story of the Japanese lacquer, describes the method of its obtaining by inc...
Pottery was a fundamentally important prehistoric innovation and had revolutionary implications for ...
I am interested in exploring the role of handmade pottery in today\u27s world. Industrialized ceram...
The subject of this qualifying paper is an Edo Period Nō theater chōken. Upon receipt, this choken w...