Best Attractions and Places to See in Mashiko machi, Japan
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List of Best Things to do in Mashiko-machi, Japan
Mashiko Spring Pottery Festival
Michi-no-Eki Mashiko
Mashiko Museum of Ceramic Art / Ceramic Art Messe Mashiko
JA Hagano Mashiko Strawberry Picking
Shoji Hamada Memorial Mashiko Sankokan Museum
Sake Brewery of Mashiko Tonoike Sake Brewing
Pottery Warehouse
Saimyoji Temple
Mashiko Pottery Tsukamoto Museum
Mashoko Town Tourist Association Center
Mashiko Pottery Fair 益子 陶器市
Mashiko City, one of the most famous pottery towns in Japan, has a big pottery fair every year in spring and fall. Although this small town only has a population of 20 thousand, over 60 thousand people rush into the city and enjoy pottery, food, and local culture during the fair.
Mashiko Tourist Association:
Lake Towada:
My channel, Japan Silhouette, features beautiful scenery, traditional culture, Origami arrangement, and the warm heart of the Japanese people.
I also visit other countries and record my impression about them, perhaps from a Japanese perspective.
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Mashiko-Tokyo Ceramics Interim 2014
Made in Windows Live Movie Maker. Music from Japanese anime Chuunibyou demo Koi Shitai! original soundtrack.
Mashiko Crowdfunding Video
Unterstütze uns bei Produktion und Release unserer ersten EP!
Travelogue in Japan, Pottery town Mashiko, volume 17
We are attending class on pottery, part 4
Mashiko
Mashiko is famous for its pottery, known as Mashiko yaki (益子焼). Mashiko is the site of Saimyoji temple, one of the oldest temples in Tochigi prefecture, and the shrine of the Utsunomiya han, located in Kami-Obaa. Large noborigama kilns were first founded there in 1853, by immigrant potters from the neighboring pottery community Kasama in Ibaraki prefecture. Simple and rustic in style, the main glazes are a clear wood ash glaze, a white rice husk ash glaze, black and kaki (persimmon), sometimes decorated with enamel red, yellow and green. These are worlds apart from the courtly ceramics of Kyoto but yet very Japanese. Pottery has been made since Jomon times (over 10,000 years ago) in Mashiko, but modern Mashiko yaki dates only to 1853. The style was popularized by the potter Shoji Hamada. He was designated as NINGEN KOKUHO (Living National Treasure) in 1955. Because of Hamada, Mashiko yaki has been viewed as a good example of Mingei (Folkcraft) pottery.
Mashiko 益子 is a town located in the south east area of Tochigi prefecture, approximately 140km away from the central Tokyo. Producing quality clay, Mashiko has developed as a pottery town known for Mashiko-yaki pottery, where many potters have studios and many kinds of potteries are sold at stores. The number of the pottery studios and the stores reaches nearly 350 in all.
Since 1966, Mashiko Pottery Market is held twice a year, for about 10 days in spring, and 4 or 5 days in autumn. Not only from Mashiko town, pottery artists and venders from all over Japan also join the market to sell various potteries. This popular market is so large that it will take one day to look around all the stalls there. It is recommended to visit early in the morning (It starts at 9:00AM) as it also gets crowded in the afternoon. During the 11-day event in spring 2014, more than 400,000 people visited the market.
While staying with a Japanese family, having dinner together at their house, you will soon notice that the Japanese has her/his own chopsticks and rice bowl (Ochawan), and it is almost like a taboo to use those of others, even people in the family. It seems Japanese people have a strong attachment for their own everyday dinnerware. Whatever else it might be, finding a very favorite ones at pottery markets is an attraction for Japanese people, and it will of course be a fun for anybody.
Thank you for watching, commenting and subscribing!
Hugs, Natasha
Mashiko-PR Movie
益子町関係団体振興協議会PRチーム作成の益子町PRムービーです。
制作:益子町関係団体振興協議会PRチーム
撮影:神田智規・栗谷昌克・水沼和幸(空撮)・岩下宗晶
編集:栗谷昌克
撮影協力:益子参考館様・濱田友緒様・鹿野武司様・明石庄作様・土祭実行委員会・益子市実行委員会・益子町の皆様・他
音楽:TAM Music Factory
Tokiichi Mashiko Spring 2018
Mashiko, Japan, is a pastoral town on the edge of the mountains that skirt the northern edge of the Kanto Plain. It's about 100km north of Tokyo. It is famous for it's beautiful robust pottery. Every year there are 2 pottery festivals held. This is footage from the 2018 spring event.
If you live in Tokyo I highly recommend the visit up. You can come by bus tour or take the train up though this is a little more difficult. It is a beautiful old-fashioned Japanese town with lots of treasures waiting to be discovered.
If you are visiting Japan from abroad and wish to have an authentic Japanese experience then look no further than Mashiko. It doesn't get more authentic than this.
Travelogue in Japan, Mashiko, Yamani Otsuka, volume 13
Our trip to the old pottery village.. driving through the towns...
Mashikoyaki, Yamani Otsuka:
Mashiko Area
The renowned pottery production center which features an astounding 380 different styles.
Mashiko is located in the southeastern part of Tochigi, and it falls in the Prefectural Nature Park which spreads across the northern reaches of the Kanto Plain. The town is known throughout Japan and the world as a production center of pottery.
The origin of Mashiko ceramics can be traced to the middle of the 19th century when Keizaburo Otsuka found potter's clay at Otsusawa and built a kiln to fire it. At the beginning of the 20th century, ceramist Shoji Hamada also built a kiln in Mashiko. The number of potters in Mashiko has been increasing ever since, and it now amounts to 380. Ceramics fairs are held every spring and autumn, attracting visitors numbering in the hundreds of thousands.
At Ceramic Art Messe Mashiko, a pottery theme park, you can enjoy exhibitions of works by Shoji Hamada as well as those of modern ceramists. There is a pottery studio on-site where you can try your hand at sculpting and painting pottery yourself. In Mashiko Sanko-kan, a museum celebrating the life and work of Hamada, you can see items ranging from his ceramic works, the kiln he used, the house he lived in, as well as works created by him and his associates.
Mashiko
Mashiko Toukiichi 益子陶器市 is one of the largest pottery market held in Mashiko in Tochigi prefecture, famous for its pottery Mashiko-yaki. During the event, more than 500 pottery stalls line along the streets and various types of potteries are sold, such as tea cups, rice bowls and Ramen bowls, designed in a traditional or modern Japanese style.
Thank you for watching, commenting and subscribing!
Hugs, Natasha
Charlie Odum in Mashiko 2004
A chance to see Charlie Odum explaining his work and kiln at his home in Mashiko October 2004
Interim 2019 Japan Ceramics Trip; Tokyo and Mashiko
【Yoshiko Kasahara 笠原良子】Mashiko Pottery japan Artist introduction
Artist introduction
【Yoshiko Kasahara 笠原良子】
1998
Graduate from Nihon University College of Art (Completion of Fine Arts course)
2000
Graduate from Tochigi Prefectural Ceramics Institute (Completion of Mashiko Pottery Technology course)
2000
Learn pottery making as an apprentice to a master potter called Shimaoka Tatsuzo who is designated as a Living National Treasure
2006
Establish my own studio in Motegi, Tochigi after 6 years of training
2014
Move to Ichikai-machi, Haga-gun, Tochigi
Hold solo exhibitions, student and teacher exhibitions, group exhibitions in various places in Japan
【Takehiro Ito 伊藤丈浩】Mashiko Pottery japan Artist introduction
Takehiro Ito 伊藤丈浩
1977
Born in Chiba, Japan
1995
Receive practical training on pottery making
1998
Move to Mashiko, Tochigi and work as a pottery trainee
2002
Travel around America and participate in the pottery workshops for 6 months
2004
Travel around Japan by bicycle, visit the pottery towns and participate in the pottery workshops for 1 year
2006
Establish my own ceramics studio in Mashiko, Japan
|益子焼つかもと Mashiko pottery
ロクロ体験の説明
Swanceramics Kamakura-Red Exhibition at the Toko Gallery in Mashiko
A forgotten Kamakura-Red ware ceramics of the Swanceramics Exhibition at the Toko Gallery in Mashiko, Japan.
By Swanica Ligtenberg
From Nov.27 - Dec. 9, 2010.
Mashiko Trip
Tokyo Union Church's Women's Fellowship takes a trip to Mashiko, a pottery town, in Japan.
Pottery at Mashiko, 2010
Trying our hands in Tsukamoto pottery at Mashiko village, Tochigi, japan
Mashiko Town, Tochigi Prefecture (03มี.ค.62) Hey Say Go | MCOT Family 14
Hey Say Go |03มี.ค.62 OnAir
Twin Ring Motegi, lbaraki Prefecture, Honda collection Hall Twin Ring Motegi, lbaraki Prefecture, Mashiko pottery, Yokoyama, Mashiko Town, Tochigi Prefecture
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A School Trip From Mashiko Japan - Leach Pottery, St Ives
5 years ago, Mashiko and St Ives signed a friendship agreement. On the sixth of November, two schools from both towns met for a wonderful day of history and Raku firing to celebrate the agreement!
We're looking forward to many more years of collaboration and friendship between the two.
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See more or contact us at:
leachpottery.com
facebook.com/leachpottery/
facebook.com/groups/leachpottery/
twitter.com/leachpottery
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Shot and Directed by: Charley Gaidoni -
Music: 'Noche' by Juan RIOS -
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We do not own the rights to the music used in this video, it is for promotional use only and will not be profited from in any way
【Moe Kawasaki 川崎萌】Mashiko Pottery japan Artist introduction
Moe Kawasaki 川崎萌
1975
Born in Yakushima, Kagoshima, Japan
1997
Start studying pottery technology at Kagoshima Ceramics Institute
2000
Complete the pottery technology course at Kagoshima Ceramics Institute
Move to Mashiko, Tochigi and learn pottery making as an apprentice to a master Mashiko potter
2005
Establish my own ceramics studio in Mashiko, Japan