Near the ancient ruins of Casas Grandes in northern Chihuahua, Mexico, just south of the San Luis Mountains, a new artistic movement is flourishing. Mata Ortiz, a small village barely three streets wide, is home to Juan Quezada, the self-taught originator of Mata Ortiz pottery, and his predominantly young followers.News From Pottery Centre
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Mata Ortiz Pottery
Near the ancient ruins of Casas Grandes in northern Chihuahua, Mexico, just south of the San Luis Mountains, a new artistic movement is flourishing. Mata Ortiz, a small village barely three streets wide, is home to Juan Quezada, the self-taught originator of Mata Ortiz pottery, and his predominantly young followers.Techniques of Pottery Making
A person who makes pottery is traditionally known as a potter. The potter's most basic tool is his or her hands, however many additional tools have been created over the long history of pottery manufacture, including the potter's wheel, various paddles, shaping tools (or ribs), slab rollers, and cutting tools.Forming techniques
Pottery can be produced in three basic forming traditions: handwork, wheel work, and slipcasting. It's very common for wheel-worked pieces to be finished by handwork techniques. Slipcast pieces tend not to be, as that negates one of the prime advantages of casting.Handwork methods can be considered both the most primitive and the most individualized techniques, where pieces are constructed from hand-rolled coils, slabs, ropes, and balls of clay, often joined with a liquid clay slurry, or slip. No two pieces of handwork will be exactly the same, so it is not suitable for making precisely matched sets of items such as dinnerware. Doing handwork enables the potters to use their imagination to create one-of-a-kind works of art. These methods are often referred to as "handbuilding".
All About Pottery
Pottery is a type of ceramic material, which the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) has defined as "(a)ll fired ceramic wares that contain clay when formed, except technical, structural, and refractory products." The term pottery is also used for a technique involving ceramic, where clay is mixed with other minerals and is formed into objects, including vessels generally designed for utilitarian purposes.Pottery production is a process where wet clay body, clay mixed with other minerals, is shaped and allowed to dry. The shaped clay body, or piece, ware or article, may be "bisque or biscuit fired" in a kiln to induce permanent changes that result in increased mechanical strength, and then fired a second time after adding a glaze or a piece may be once fired by applying appropriate glaze to the dry unfired clay and firing in one cycle.
Raku Ware - Microcosm within your hands
The Origin of Raku Ware
The tea bowls made by Chôjirô were initially called ima-yaki, literally "now wares", that is to say, wares produced at the present time. They were subsequently renamed juraku-yaki, "juraku wares", due to the fact that Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598), the leading warrior statesman of the time, presented Chôjirô with a seal bearing the Chinese character for Raku. The term Raku derived from Jurakudai, the name of a palace built by Hideyoshi, one of the great symbols of his age. Raku then became the name of the family that produced the wares. This is the only example in the history of a family name becoming synonymous with the ceramics they produced. Furthermore, few potter families have continued in an unbroken line in the way the Raku family has done.Master Potters in Raku Generation
Raku Generation

- Chojiro, The founder [? - 1589]
- Jokei [? - 1635]
- Donyu [1599 - 1656]
- Ichinyu [1640 - 1696]
- Sonyu [1664 - 1716]
- Sanyu [1685 - 1739]
- Chonyu [1714 - 1770]
- Tokunyu [1745 - 1774]
- Ryonyu [1756 - 1834]
- Tannyu [1795 - 1854]
- Keinyu [1817 - 1902]
- Konyu [1857 - 1932]
- Seinyu [1887 - 1944]
- Kakunyu [1918 - 1980]
- Kichizaemon [1949 - ]
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