A collection of thirty-five tea bowls and sets of cups made by potters with the Japanese National Living Treasure designation was given to the ASU Ceramics Research Center in 2017. The National Living Treasure program, founded in Japan in 1950, recognizes leading artists in designated fields as bearers of intangible cultural properties. The ASU collection is comprised of pieces made by every potter who has been named a National Living Treasure, from Shoji Hamada in 1955 to Kato Kozo in 2010. The collection will go on permanent display at the ASU Ceramics Research Center at the Brickyard in Fall 2018. Sharing the National Living Treasure ceramics collection in the ASU Digital Repository is the next step in the process of increasing awareness about ASU’s rising status as a center of Asian art research.

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Created1925 to 2012
Description

Miwa Jusetsu (1910-2012) was born in Hagi, in Yamaguchi Prefecture, at the southwest end of Japan's main island. Miwa, the heir to a long family tradition of Hagi pottery, was known for his stark, rough style, which was inspired by the movements of the sea. He inherited the title of

Miwa Jusetsu (1910-2012) was born in Hagi, in Yamaguchi Prefecture, at the southwest end of Japan's main island. Miwa, the heir to a long family tradition of Hagi pottery, was known for his stark, rough style, which was inspired by the movements of the sea. He inherited the title of Kyūsetsu XI, and was named a Japanese National Living Treasure in 1983. Miwa's older brother, Kyūwa (Kyūsetsu X) received the same designation in 1970. Hagi-yaki has its origins in the forced relocation of Korean potters that occurred during Japan's 16th century invasions of Korea. The potters were sent to various regions, and those who settled in Hagi created the Hagi-yaki style.