Yunomis and the Law of Unintended Consequences

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Michio Fujiwara was a celebrated potter in the city of Hiroshima, Japan. As an apprentice, he learned the potter’s art in the early 1920s. Over the years he became especially well-known for his yunomis and tea ceremony ceramics.

Michio’s son, Ichiro Fujiwara, was born in 1921. He served his country as a much decorated pilot in the Japanese Imperial Navy. On December 7, 1941, the youthful Ichiro lead the first air wing attack on Pearl Harbor. Later in the war, in a furious air and sea battle against the American fleet, he was credited with inflicting heavy damage on the USS Missouri. Ichiro would survive World War II and had planned to open a teahouse/restaurant in peacetime. An important feature of this venture would include his father’s very famous yunomis. But in an ironic turn of unintended consequences, that was not to be.

Michio continued to operate his pottery throughout the war and his fame as a yunomi maker increased, even during those difficult times. In 1945, on the afternoon of August the 5th, Michio was loading his kiln with the intention of a glaze firing the next day. He preheated all night and by early morning the kiln and its 800 yunomis were sufficiently warm to proceed.

At the next moment, Hiroshima was introduced into the nuclear age and these tea cups — and the rest of the city — reached the necessary cone 10 temperature in approximately 6 seconds. The cup shown here is the lone survivor of that firing. It reveals the marks of uranium fusion and remains metaphorically radioactive to this day. It is not recommended for daily use but certainly qualifies as a “cautionary object” and, as such, a Rascal Ware Original. To the best of our knowledge, there is no other like it in the world. In a turn on the Biblical prophesy, this is a case of the sins of the son being visited upon the father. It was President Harry Truman who ordered the dropping of the first atomic bomb. Truman was from Missouri. What goes around comes around.

Filed under: Article, Ceramic Technology — admin @ 11:04 am

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