Yoshita Minori Japanese, Living National Treasure, 1932

The Yoshita family runs the Nishikiyama kiln, which specializes in aka-e kinrande, a highly decorative porcelain technique involving gold and red enamel painting in brocade-patterns on Kutani wares from Ishikawa. In 1951, Yoshita Minori, who had been making pottery since high school, took over the family business and became the 3rd generation head of the family. Since then, he has been experimenting with various traditional techniques characteristic to the Nishikiyama Kiln while refining them in innovative ways. The artist is recognized for his graceful application of yūri-kinsai, an underglazed gold decorative porcelain developed during the 1960s in Kanazawa, in which gold-leaf cutouts are applied prior to glazing rather than painted by brush. Yoshita’s technique is a perfect marriage of elegant Kutani porcelain traditions with kinpaku or gold-leaf, the highly prized local product of the former Kaga domain, Ishikawa. His method opened a new frontier in the world of gold-colored porcelains in Japan and he is regarded as the premier artist of this technique. In 2001, he was awarded the Medal with Purple Ribbon, and in 2006, he received the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette, from the Emperor of Japan.

 

Selected Exhibitions

2025  Asia Week New York, US

2013–2018 Asia Week New York, US

2017  The 64th Japan Traditional Kōgei Exhibition, Japan

2014  Japan from Prehistory to the Present, British Museum, London, UK | Contemporary Japanese Ceramics Embassy of Japan, Washington D.C., US

2012  Japan: Land of Enchantments, Palazzo Pitti, Florence, Italy

2007  Crafting Beauty in Modern Japan, British Museum, London, UK

 

Selected Awards 

2001  The Medal of the Purple Ribbon, bestowed by the Emperor of Japan | Designated by Japan as Holder of Important Intangible Cultural Property for Underglaze Gilded Gold Decorations, becoming a Living National Treasure

 

Selected Public Collections

Embassy of Japan | Washington D.C., US 
Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution | Washington D.C., US
British Museum | London, UK
Auckland Museum | New Zealand
National Museum of Modern Art | Tokyo, Japan