Suiban (Japanese bronze flower vessel bases) 🔍

Bronze caster and ritual object maker (1400 - 1868)

Suiban are shallow, heavy, unadorned bronze trays originally used in Japanese Buddhist altars as water basins or flower vessel bases, prized for their simple rectangular or oval forms and subtle patina. These objects emphasize material presence through extreme minimalism, without any decorative gesture.

Mentors & Influences (Looking Backward)

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Inspired By Suiban (Japanese bronze flower vessel bases) (Looking Forward)

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Naoto Fukasawa
Product designer
The suiban's utterly plain, weighty, and self-sufficient form—a vessel that asks nothing of the viewer—directly prefigured Fukasawa's 'Without Thought' philosophy of objects that are 'already there.'