The Marks Project - A Marks Dictionary of American Studio Pottery, 1946 to Present

Akira Satake

—Born Osaka, Japan

EDUCATION

1977-1979 Osaka School of Visual Arts, Osaka, Japan

PRIMARY WORK EXPERIENCE

2003Studio potter

2013 Opened Akira Satake Ceramics/Gallery Mugen

HONORS

—Philadelphia Museum awarded him the National Award for Excellence in Contemporary Clay

—A Craftsman’s Legacy - a national weekly television series on PBS, featured his life and work

Arika Satake is known for producing a full line of functional pieces.

Satake was born in Japan and emigrated to the USA in 1983. In 2003 he relocated from Brooklyn, New York to Swannanoa, NC.  Satake’s work is hand built or thrown and altered and fired in a Japanese Kyushu-style oil kiln which he built in 2004 or a wood-fired kiln he built in 2007. Satake also uses a gas kiln.

Satake says of his work:  "... the act of creation is a collaboration between myself, the clay and the fire. Collaboration means finding what the clay wants to be and bringing out its beauty in the way that the beauty of our surroundings is created through natural forces. Undulations in the sand that has been moved by the wind, rock formations caused by landslides, the crackle, and patina in the wall of an old house; all these owe their special beauty to the random hand of Nature. The fire is the ultimate random part of the collaborative equation. I hope the fire will be my ally, but I know it will always transform the clay in ways I cannot anticipate." ( Akira Satake 9/2016)

Public Collections

Mint Museum, Charlotte, North Carolina

The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC

 

Website: www.akirasatake.com

 

 

Center for CraftSouthern Highland Craft Guild

 

Typical Marks
2015
Yunomi VII
Date: 2015
Materials: Porcelain
Surface Technique: Shino Glaze
Courtesy of The Nevica Project
Courtesy of The Nevica Project
Sculpture
Method: Hand-Built
Surface Technique: Stain
Photo: TMP
Photo: TMP
Photo: TMP
Sculpture
Method: Hand-Built
Surface Technique: Glaze
Photo: TMP
Photo: TMP
Photo: TMP
Bowl
Form: Bowl
Method: Hand-Built
Surface Technique: Woodfire
Photo: TMP
Photo: TMP
Photo: TMP
Soy Bottle
Materials: Colored Clay
Method: Slab-Built, Hand-Built
Photo: TMP
Photo: TMP
Photo: TMP

Citation: "The Marks Project." Last modified May 26, 2024. http://www.themarksproject.org:443/print/marks/satake

Tags

Asheville, North Carolina, Southern Highland Craft Guild, Center for Craft Creativity and Design

 

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