For Sale

Contact me if you are interested in any of these items.

Record Shelves, Ikea

Corner Cabinet (SOLD)

Framed Prints

Cabinet for Wall Mounting

Oil Painting, Mounted

Poster, Framed, Baltimore

Cabinet for CDs, Ikea Leksvik (SOLD)

VOYAGER GOLDEN RECORD 3xLP BOX SET

Pottery and Art

Several of these pieces are

Teruo Hara Ceramics

Teruo Hara was born 1928, in Chiba, Japan. He attended Tokyo Kyoiku University, 1946-1952. In 1952 Teruo Hara set up studio in Kyoto, the ceramic art center of Japan. After the war became involved with an avant-garde movement. The Sodeisha Group, characterized by more free form in their ceramics and believers in “individual expression” as opposed to the potters of the minigei or folk crafts who believed pottery should be anonymous and follow the forms of the past.

From 1953 through 1958 Mr. Hara exhibited internationally in Sao Paulo, Tokyo and Kyoto, Rome, Dusseldorf and Brussels, also winning the grand ceramic prize at the world’s fair in Brussels. In 1958 Teruo Hara came to the United States under the auspices of the Fine Arts Committee and the American craftsman Council. Lectured and traveled over most of the United States and introduced Sodeisha shows while traveling.

In 1959 Mr. Hara exhibited in New York. In 1960 Teruo Hara worked with Design Technics as designer and engineer, researched kiln construction and ceramic materials. Set up studio at Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. From 1959 through 1963 Mr. Hara exhibited ceramics in Houston, Miami, New York, California, Iowa, Maryland and Virginia.

In 1963 Teruo Hara came to the Corcoran School of Arts as a ceramic instructor, and taught there for five years. In 1965 he designed and began construction of a new studio in Warrenton VA. During this same period 1964 through 1967 Teruo Hara continued to exhibit his ceramics in Philadelphia, Virginia, Maryland and Washington, DC.

In 1968 The Corcoran Gallery of Arts presented a one man exhibition of the fine ceramics of Teruo Hara. The occasion marked twenty years of his work as a potter, his 40th birthday and the completion of five years as a faculty member at the Corcoran School of Arts.

Mr. Hara worked in the ancient glazes of copper red, celadon, tenmoku and ash. His later works are wheel thrown, simple and quiet in form. A plate is never perfectly round for it must have its own individual life- bottles are never symmetrical but contain subtle movement.

Teruo Hara’s list of accomplishments obtained through his multi-talents as architect, designer, potter, sculptor and teacher are many. Most are not listed here. Sadly Mr. Hara died in 1986.

Charles Hamilton, Seattle