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Bizen Sake Cup — Kei Fujiwara (1899–1983) Living National Treasure · Bizen Ware Master

Bizen Sake Cup — Kei Fujiwara (1899–1983) Living National Treasure · Bizen Ware Master

Regular price ¥80,000 JPY
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In 1970, the Japanese government designated Kei Fujiwara a Living National Treasure — the highest recognition the country grants to a living craftsperson. His hands shaped no more clay after 1983. Everything he made is now finite. This cup is one of them.


The Object in Your Hands

This cup was made without glaze.

No coating. No finish. Nothing between you and the raw material. What you are holding is Bizen clay that spent days inside a wood-fired kiln, exposed to ash and fire at temperatures that transform matter at a molecular level. The color, the texture, the quiet variation across the surface — none of it was designed. All of it was earned.

That is the Bizen philosophy. The potter proposes. The fire decides.


On Living With It

In the morning, before the day has asked anything of you yet — fill it with espresso. The clay is thick and dense; it holds heat longer than porcelain, longer than glass. You will notice the difference in your hands before you notice it in the temperature.

In the evening, pour sake. Unglazed Bizen clay is porous in a way that interacts with what it holds — the sharp edges of alcohol soften slightly, in a way that is subtle and real and difficult to explain until you have felt it yourself.


What Time Leaves Behind

Look closely at the inside of the cup.

You will notice the faint traces of a life already lived — the soft marks that accumulate only through decades of quiet, repeated use. We do not hide these marks, and we do not apologize for them. They are the only evidence that an object has mattered. A cup without them is just a cup. A cup with them is a small, private history.


The Maker

He was a poet before he was a potter. At thirty, Kei Fujiwara walked away from a literary career in Tokyo — not because he had failed, but because he had looked honestly at his own work and found it lacking. He returned to Okayama, spent years in silence, and at forty, placed his hands in clay for the first time. Whatever he had been searching for in language, he found it in the earth.


One cup. One owner. No reissue.

Artisan: Kei Fujiwara — Living National Treasure (designated 1970)

Tradition: Bizen Ware, Okayama Prefecture

Technique: Unglazed, anagama wood-fired stoneware

Size: H 4.5 cm · W 6.0 cm

Includes: Original signed wooden box (tomobako)

Condition: Pre-owned, excellent · natural use marks present

Shipping: Complimentary worldwide express free shipping

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