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    The Guardian

    people 438 subscribers • The need for independent journalism has never been greater.

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      The world’s most sublime dinner set – for 2,000 guests! Hyakkō: 100+ Makers from Japan review

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 11 December 2025 • 1 minute

    Japan House, London
    The fruit of a two-year odyssey through the workshops of artisans using ancient techniques, this delightful show features rippling chestnut trays, exquisitely turned kettles and vessels crafted from petrified leather

    As a retort to the doom-mongering prognostications of AI’s dominance over human creativity, it is momentarily comforting to tally up the things it cannot do. It cannot throw a pot, blow glass, beat metal, weave bamboo or turn wood. Perhaps, when it has assumed absolute control of human consciousness and the machinery of mass production, it will be able to. But for now, throwing a vessel and weighing its heft in your hand, or carving a tray and sizing up its form with your eye are still the preserve of skilled craftspeople, using techniques their distant ancestors would recognise.

    On show at London’s Japan House is the work of more than 100 pairs of eyes and hands, constituting an overwhelming profusion of human creativity, corralled into an exhibition of laconic simplicity. About 2,000 objects – bowls, trays, cups, metalwork, glassware and some perplexing bamboo cocoons – are grouped according to their makers on long, softly lit display tables. At first glance, you might think you have stumbled into an especially refined John Lewis homeware department, but then you notice the delicate black and red lacquer work, the gleaming gold on the inside of a perfectly shaped sake cup, the intricacy of the bamboo and some eccentrically shaped vessels, like alien seedpods, that look like ceramics but turn out be a kind of petrified leather.

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      The world’s most sublime dinner set – for 2,000 guests! Hyakkō: 100+ Makers from Japan review

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 11 December 2025 • 1 minute

    Japan House, London
    The fruit of a two-year odyssey through the workshops of artisans using ancient techniques, this delightful show features rippling chestnut trays, exquisitely turned kettles and vessels crafted from petrified leather

    As a retort to the doom-mongering prognostications of AI’s dominance over human creativity, it is momentarily comforting to tally up the things it cannot do. It cannot throw a pot, blow glass, beat metal, weave bamboo or turn wood. Perhaps, when it has assumed absolute control of human consciousness and the machinery of mass production, it will be able to. But for now, throwing a vessel and weighing its heft in your hand, or carving a tray and sizing up its form with your eye are still the preserve of skilled craftspeople, using techniques their distant ancestors would recognise.

    On show at London’s Japan House is the work of more than 100 pairs of eyes and hands, constituting an overwhelming profusion of human creativity, corralled into an exhibition of laconic simplicity. About 2,000 objects – bowls, trays, cups, metalwork, glassware and some perplexing bamboo cocoons – are grouped according to their makers on long, softly lit display tables. At first glance, you might think you have stumbled into an especially refined John Lewis homeware department, but then you notice the delicate black and red lacquer work, the gleaming gold on the inside of a perfectly shaped sake cup, the intricacy of the bamboo and some eccentrically shaped vessels, like alien seedpods, that look like ceramics but turn out be a kind of petrified leather.

    Continue reading...
    • tagculture tagculture tagculture tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design tagjapan tagjapan tagjapan tagcraft tagcraft tagcraft tagart tagart tagart tagculture tagculture tagculture tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design tagjapan tagjapan tagjapan tagcraft tagcraft tagcraft tagart tagart tagart tagculture tagculture tagculture tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design tagjapan tagjapan tagjapan tagcraft tagcraft tagcraft tagart tagart tagart

    • Pictures 3 image

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    • chevron_right

      The world’s most sublime dinner set – for 2,000 guests! Hyakkō: 100+ Makers from Japan review

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 11 December 2025 • 1 minute

    Japan House, London
    The fruit of a two-year odyssey through the workshops of artisans using ancient techniques, this delightful show features rippling chestnut trays, exquisitely turned kettles and vessels crafted from petrified leather

    As a retort to the doom-mongering prognostications of AI’s dominance over human creativity, it is momentarily comforting to tally up the things it cannot do. It cannot throw a pot, blow glass, beat metal, weave bamboo or turn wood. Perhaps, when it has assumed absolute control of human consciousness and the machinery of mass production, it will be able to. But for now, throwing a vessel and weighing its heft in your hand, or carving a tray and sizing up its form with your eye are still the preserve of skilled craftspeople, using techniques their distant ancestors would recognise.

    On show at London’s Japan House is the work of more than 100 pairs of eyes and hands, constituting an overwhelming profusion of human creativity, corralled into an exhibition of laconic simplicity. About 2,000 objects – bowls, trays, cups, metalwork, glassware and some perplexing bamboo cocoons – are grouped according to their makers on long, softly lit display tables. At first glance, you might think you have stumbled into an especially refined John Lewis homeware department, but then you notice the delicate black and red lacquer work, the gleaming gold on the inside of a perfectly shaped sake cup, the intricacy of the bamboo and some eccentrically shaped vessels, like alien seedpods, that look like ceramics but turn out be a kind of petrified leather.

    Continue reading...
    • tagculture tagculture tagculture tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design tagjapan tagjapan tagjapan tagcraft tagcraft tagcraft tagart tagart tagart tagculture tagculture tagculture tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design tagjapan tagjapan tagjapan tagcraft tagcraft tagcraft tagart tagart tagart tagculture tagculture tagculture tagart and design tagart and design tagart and design tagjapan tagjapan tagjapan tagcraft tagcraft tagcraft tagart tagart tagart

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