Thank You to Tōsei 東西 Shoemaker: ... Of Priests and Potters ...

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  • Jundo
    Treeleaf Founder and Priest
    • Apr 2006
    • 44322

    Thank You to Tōsei 東西 Shoemaker: ... Of Priests and Potters ...

    For centuries, Zen Buddhists have been supported by, and been, artists, craftspeople and artisans. They make the beautiful implements that we use in our rituals, temples and practice places, from Buddha Statues to incense burners. Now, we have had such a gift to our Sangha. As you know, this Sunday, we will be celebrating the Homeleaving Ordination of Koujitsu, Kouriki and Shinkon as Novice Soto Zen Priests, which you are invited to come witness (LINK). The receipt of the Oryoki Bowls and, specifically, the large Monk's Bowl (頭鉢), is a key part of the Ceremony, together with receipt of Robes, Bowing Cloth and other items. Shinkon was previously a Zen priest in another Lineage and has bowls, but Koujitsu and Kouriki are receiving the Bowls for the first time.

    Our Treeleaf member and friend, Tōsei 東西 Peter Shoemaker, is a gifted and experienced professional potter, and asked if he might volunteer to provide their Bowls for this Ordination. Working with great care for many hours and days, he fashioned and kilned the bowls at his studio in France, consulted with me for a fitting inscription to be baked into each bowl, and then delivered them to our two priests in time for their Ordination. We are grateful. Here are the finished Bowls:
    .

    I asked him to write something about the process and his studio, and how he brings Zen practice into his creations. Tōsei writes:

    For these bowls I used a local black clay, produced by a 150-years-old company still run by its founding family. This clay allows me to only glaze the inside (making it easy to clean) leaving the outside as raw black ceramic, with all of the textures and imperfections evident to the touch of those using these bowls, a reminder of the frictions that are necessary so that we may eat. While many oryoki sets of bowls are made of lacquered wood, I was attracted to the perceived fragility of ceramic bowls. They aren’t, of course, but do require a little more attention to detail in their use and particularly in the care that must be taken so that they don’t crash together and upset the quiet of the meal. In my use of them, I found a deeper level of attentiveness and presence is demanded in the unwrapping and wrapping of the bowls. This is good.

    The bowls are formed entirely by hand, using no mechanical tools whatsoever. This ensures that the shapes derive from my efforts to translate an ideal into the real world of handiwork—with all the imperfections and idiosyncrasies that that engenders. Like the work we do with needle and thread in our Nyoho-e tradition, this work with clay and water is one of diligent effort, stopping and then starting again, fixing what must be fixed and accepting what cannot, knowing that in the end it will be just as it is.

    These bowls were first shaped from the raw clay, the buddha bowl (zuhatsu) first, to establish the right size, and from then, the other two. Over the next couple of days, they were refined and trimmed and took on their final form. Once totally dry they were fired. There were two firings, in this instance, in an electric kiln. The first was to transform the clay into an immutable object (but still porous enough to accept the glaze). Then the bowls were glazed and fired for a second time to fuse the silica in the ceramic and glaze into an impermeable barrier. Before this second firing, I inscribed a treasured passage from The Heart Sutra (“beyond all delusions, nirvana is already here”) on roughly-torn pressed mulberry paper, and then added the dharma name of each recipient (as well as the chop for my atelier). These were fired with the bowls, consecrating them in the intermixing of the dharma, fire, glaze, and smoke.

    I offer them to our new unsui with a deep sense of gratitude and hope.

    BOWLS READY FOR FIRING:

    .

    I got my start as a ceramicist first as a collector—of Chinese, Japanese, Arabic, Korean, and later East African ceramics and art—and after a period of reporting and writing on indigenous American pottery traditions began to pay particular attention to the craft as craft. My entrée to making rather than admiring came through a profound appreciation of the tea bowls (chawans) used during Muromachi period tea ceremonies, and in particular with the work done over the last few centuries by the Raku clan. Creating such pieces—organic, imperfect, beautiful—and the processes necessary to reveal them, offered a way to support my deepening commitment to bringing zen practices into my everyday life.

    I made my first chawan three years ago, and have continued since then to work with the form, paying more and more attention to the doing rather than the end. A year ago, I incorporated the use of a five-thousand-year-old stone tool in the shaping process—recognizing and honoring, through this connection, the role pottery has had in human development. A year or so ago, during Ango, I made my first oryoki set of three bowls. The work on those, and the lessons they taught me, suggested an appropriate sort of dana, supporting those making the profound commitment to encourage and support the sangha in the salvation of all sentient beings. Jundo concurred.

    My atelier—named TuShu—is located in the gardens of my house in the French Norman countryside. TuShu is not a bit of Japanese linguistic arcana (although the Chinese translation of ‘books’ is not entirely inappropriate), but rather is a portmanteau of Two Shoe, a play on my last name—Shoemaker—and the work my wife will do next door as a garden designer and sumi artist. I do mostly ceramics, and a combination of traditional forms and more contemporary work.
    Some other works in his studio ...
    . Dlt Studio Shelf.jpg


    You can see some examples of his artistic creations here ...



    Truly amazing expressions. Here is one of many ... called Traces 2025 ...
    . dlt Traces 2025.jpg


    And one of his tea bowl creations ... named Sea Dreams 2024 ...
    . dlt sea dreams 2024.jpg


    Lovely, Tōsei. Nine Bows. Jundo
    .

    This food comes from the efforts
    of all sentient beings past and present,
    and is medicine for nourishment of our Practice-Life.
    We offer this meal of many virtues and tastes
    to the Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha,
    and to all life in every realm of existence.
    May all sentient beings in the universe
    be sufficiently nourished.
    Last edited by Jundo; 05-22-2025, 04:13 AM.
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE
  • Koriki
    Novice Priest-in-Training
    • Apr 2022
    • 745

    #2
    I was honored to receive the Oryoki set from Tosei and I appreciate his efforts and intentions. It's a great example of how we can we can contribute to causes that are important to us with our passions.

    Gassho,
    Koriki
    s@lah

    Comment

    • Junsho
      Member
      • Mar 2024
      • 419

      #3
      This is beautiful .

      Gassho
      SatLah
      Junshō 純聲 - Pure Voice, Genuine Speech

      Each time we fall asleep, we die; each time we wake, we are reborn.

      Comment

      • Tairin
        Member
        • Feb 2016
        • 3291

        #4
        Wow! All the pottery is gorgeous. Thank you for your time and generosity in providing for our (soon to be) new Unsui

        gqssho2
        Tairin
        sat today and lah
        泰林 - Tai Rin - Peaceful Woods

        Comment

        • Kojitsu
          Novice Priest-in-Training
          • Mar 2024
          • 403

          #5
          Yes, thank you so much Tōsei, they are truly beautiful and it’s so nice to have something gifted from a sangha member, I will treasure them.

          gassho
          kojitsu

          Comment

          • Seiko
            Novice Priest-in-Training
            • Jul 2020
            • 1759

            #6
            Lovely.

            Gasshō, Seiko, stlah
            Gandō Seiko
            頑道清光
            (Stubborn Way of Pure Light)

            My street name is 'Al'.

            Any words I write here are merely the thoughts of an apprentice priest, just my opinions, that's all.

            Comment

            • Tosei
              Member
              • Jul 2020
              • 218

              #7
              It was such a great pleasure to create these objects for this purpose. May all beings be nourished with the opportunity to be of help to others.

              Gassho.

              satlah
              東西 - Tōsei - East West
              there is only what is, and it is all miraculous

              Comment

              • Washin
                Senior Priest-in-Training
                • Dec 2014
                • 3971

                #8
                Beautiful work. Thank you so much, Tosei.

                Gassho,
                Washin
                Sat/Lah
                Kaidō (皆道) Every Way
                Washin (和信) Harmony Trust
                ----
                I am a novice priest-in-training. Anything that I say must not be considered as teaching
                and should be taken with a 'grain of salt'.

                Comment

                • Heiso
                  Member
                  • Jan 2019
                  • 849

                  #9
                  These are stunning, thank you for sharing.

                  Gassho,
                  Heiso
                  LtLah

                  Comment

                  • Shui_Di
                    Member
                    • Apr 2008
                    • 394

                    #10
                    Wow..!!!

                    Very incredible works. Gassho to Tosei.

                    Gassho, Mujo
                    Sat
                    Practicing the Way means letting all things be what they are in their Self-nature. - Master Dogen.

                    Comment

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