Fujimoto Yoshimichi
Japanese,
(1919–1992)
Fujimoto Yoshimichi (NŌDŌ) was renowned for his depictions of birds in nature executed in overglaze enamels on large porcelain vessels, boxes, and platters. Born in Tokyo in 1919, A Tokyo native, Fujimoto received his degree from Tokyo University of the Arts, where years later he joined the faculty and became an important teacher to many accomplished clay artists. Earlier, in 1941, he entered the Crafts Technical Training Center where he later trained with Tomimoto Kenkichi (1886-1963) and briefly also taught. After the war, Fujimoto again studied under Tomimoto, focusing on production ware made for the international market. In his mid-thirties, he concentrated on sculpture and joined both the Sōdeisha and the Modern Art Association. Despite his potential in this new arena, he returned to functionality and then invented a painterly layered-glazing technique on porcelain that produced a watercolor-like effect for his representational depictions of nature, which led to his 1986 designation as a Living National Treasure.