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Shiga: Discover the Living Tradition of Shigaraki Pottery

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Shiga: Discover the Living Tradition of Shigaraki Pottery

Explore the world of Shigaraki ware on a guided tour of the Shigaraki Ceramic Cultural Park and Museum. Visit working studios and learn about the history and artistry of this ancient craft.

Itinerary

Shigaraki Station
Meeting point: In front of the ticket gate at Shigaraki Station. The guide will be waiting for you holding a yellow sign. For details, please refer to the map.
1
Shigaraki Pottery Museum
Guided tour, Visit, Sightseeing (50min)
2
Two local Shigaraki pottery studios
Shopping, Guided tour, Sightseeing, Visit (50min)

Plan

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Shiga: Discover the Living Tradition of Shigaraki Pottery

2 hours

<Inclusions>
Guided tour of Shigaraki Ceramic Museum
Visit to two working Shigaraki studios and shops
Professional local guide

<Plan Code>
G-SHG-009-1-PR

80.01USD~

Highlights

Discover the art of Shigaraki ware, one of Japan's oldest ceramic traditions
Visit the Shigaraki Ceramic Cultural Park and Museum with a local guide
Learn about the history of Shigaraki pottery and its connection to the land
Explore two working Shigaraki studios and see artisans at work
Get help from your guide if you wish to purchase a piece of Shigaraki ware

What's Included

Guided tour of Shigaraki Ceramic Museum
Visit to two working Shigaraki studios and shops
Professional local guide

Experience details

Begin your experience with a visit to the Shigaraki Ceramic Cultural Park and Museum, the foremost center dedicated to the history and artistry of Shigaraki ware.

Here, your professional local guide will introduce you to the origins of the craft, which date back over 700 years.
Learn how Shigaraki’s distinctive pottery emerged during the medieval period and flourished in the tea culture of the Muromachi and Momoyama eras, when its earthy textures and natural glazes became highly prized by tea masters for their rustic beauty and subtle elegance. See displays that reveal the evolution of the style, from utilitarian storage jars to refined tea bowls and artistic sculptures.
Learn how the rough yet warm surfaces of Shigaraki ware, often enhanced by wood ash in the kiln, came to embody the Japanese aesthetic of wabi-sabi—an appreciation of imperfection and natural simplicity.
Discover how the local clay, rich in feldspar and resistant to high heat, gives the pottery its warmth, speckling, and durability. Drawn from ancient Lake Biwa deposits, it produces reddish to cream tones often touched with glass-like ash glaze.

After this context, your guide will lead you to two working Shigaraki studios near the museum.
Each is both a workshop and a gallery, where artisans continue traditions while also experimenting with modern forms. These spaces let you step inside the daily world of potters and see how Shigaraki ware fits into both life and art.
Here, your guide’s expertise becomes invaluable: whether you are curious about a glaze effect, the use of a tea bowl, or the history of a kiln, they will interpret, explain, and assist. If you wish to purchase a piece, your guide will support you throughout, bridging any language gaps. While the cost of purchases is not included, the chance to take home an authentic Shigaraki item—be it a sake cup, a tea bowl, or a tanuki figure—offers a lasting reminder of your journey.
As a local expert, your guide will also share stories of Shigaraki’s rise as a pottery town, the symbolism of its raccoon-dog statues, and the challenges artisans face in preserving wood-firing methods in a modern world.

By the end of this two-hour journey, you will have explored the origins of one of Japan’s iconic ceramic traditions, understood how geology and culture shape artistry, and connected directly with the artisans who keep the tradition alive.

Meeting Place

Shigaraki Station: Meeting point: In front of the ticket gate at Shigaraki Station. The guide will be waiting for you holding a yellow sign. For details, please refer to the map.

Important information

Know before you go
・The tour is designed to give a meaningful introduction to Shigaraki ware.
・The tour includes visits to both historical and contemporary pottery sites.
・Purchases are optional and not included in the tour fee.

Cancellation Policy

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