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Studio Art Pottery785 of 1190Free Form Abstract Glazed PotteryYunomi Tea Cups
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    Posted 9 years ago

    shaliberty
    (11 items)

    We have no idea what this is. If anyone has any information, we would appreciate it. It seems to be a very unique item..

    Mystery Solved
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    Studio Art Pottery
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    Studio Art Pottery Ceramic Squashed Head Face Vase Sculpture Handmade Signed
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    Australian Pottery Greenway Shell Cornucopia Vase Studio Ceramic (1C) MO#8767
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    Studio Art Pottery Ceramic Squashed Head Face Vase Sculpture Handmade Signed
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    Comments

    1. CanyonRoad, 9 years ago
      This is contemporary raku studio pottery, more correctly called "American raku" or post-firing reduction. It's low-fired, and porous, so is for decorative use only.

      Here's a link to a page that explains more about the post-firing reduction process, and how it differs from traditional Japanese Raku: http://americanraku.com/raku.htm
    2. CanyonRoad, 9 years ago
      I probably should have mentioned that raku pottery like this isn't related in any way to anything Native American. It's a type of pottery which is generally credited to being started by American potter Paul Soldner in the 1960's, but which is now made by studio potters all over the world.

      The name "Raku" comes from a traditional Japanese pottery, but American raku isn't the same thing as Japanese Raku.
    3. shaliberty, 9 years ago
      Thank you for the reference to the Raku, wondering if we can figure out which artist may have made it, and it's age? Have added a couple more pictures. One of which appears to be the signature on the bottom, difficult to read, but may look familiar to someone.
    4. shaliberty, 9 years ago
      Appreciate CanyonRoad's response, I do love this site!

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