Skip to Content
HAND OR EYE
SHOP
Our Story
Journal
Contact
Login Account
0
0
HAND OR EYE
SHOP
Our Story
Journal
Contact
Login Account
0
0
SHOP
Our Story
Journal
Contact
Login Account
SHOP Large Takosubo (Octopus Pot)
0132B6CA-C329-42C1-9157-4227C2E9F9A9.jpg Image 1 of 3
0132B6CA-C329-42C1-9157-4227C2E9F9A9.jpg
940C46BD-02FC-4135-8AB1-D726F17A0869.jpg Image 2 of 3
940C46BD-02FC-4135-8AB1-D726F17A0869.jpg
4E76570C-A4EC-482B-8305-D2A1B4C86409.jpg Image 3 of 3
4E76570C-A4EC-482B-8305-D2A1B4C86409.jpg
0132B6CA-C329-42C1-9157-4227C2E9F9A9.jpg
940C46BD-02FC-4135-8AB1-D726F17A0869.jpg
4E76570C-A4EC-482B-8305-D2A1B4C86409.jpg

Large Takosubo (Octopus Pot)

$120.00

A larger (8 1/2”) takosubo (literally, “octopus pot.” Traditionally, these traps were laid out in the intertidal zone, where they would provide a temporary refuge for unsuspecting octopuses. At low tide, the fisherman would collect them, and plop the poor cephalopod into his or her basket. This example is very old, hand-formed from wild clay. There is apparently one potter left in Japan making wheel-thrown takosobo, but octopus traps are usually made of plastic now.

If you look up “takosubo” you will mostly find references to takosubo cardiomyopathy (“broken heart syndrome”). In a nutshell, this is a condition that sometimes affects people who have experienced sudden, high levels of stress. The left ventricle of the heart contracts dramatically, forming a shape which Japanese cardiologists compared to an octopus pot. This often happens to otherwise healthy people after the loss of a loved one, thus the poetic sobriquet.

The image of octopuses nestling, peaceful and content in their little caves, was not lost on Matsuo Bashō — the great poet, and insightful observer of the human condition.

Mere octopus traps,

Evanescent dreams beneath

A midsummer moon.

蛸壺やはかなき夢を夏の月

(1688)

Add To Cart

A larger (8 1/2”) takosubo (literally, “octopus pot.” Traditionally, these traps were laid out in the intertidal zone, where they would provide a temporary refuge for unsuspecting octopuses. At low tide, the fisherman would collect them, and plop the poor cephalopod into his or her basket. This example is very old, hand-formed from wild clay. There is apparently one potter left in Japan making wheel-thrown takosobo, but octopus traps are usually made of plastic now.

If you look up “takosubo” you will mostly find references to takosubo cardiomyopathy (“broken heart syndrome”). In a nutshell, this is a condition that sometimes affects people who have experienced sudden, high levels of stress. The left ventricle of the heart contracts dramatically, forming a shape which Japanese cardiologists compared to an octopus pot. This often happens to otherwise healthy people after the loss of a loved one, thus the poetic sobriquet.

The image of octopuses nestling, peaceful and content in their little caves, was not lost on Matsuo Bashō — the great poet, and insightful observer of the human condition.

Mere octopus traps,

Evanescent dreams beneath

A midsummer moon.

蛸壺やはかなき夢を夏の月

(1688)

A larger (8 1/2”) takosubo (literally, “octopus pot.” Traditionally, these traps were laid out in the intertidal zone, where they would provide a temporary refuge for unsuspecting octopuses. At low tide, the fisherman would collect them, and plop the poor cephalopod into his or her basket. This example is very old, hand-formed from wild clay. There is apparently one potter left in Japan making wheel-thrown takosobo, but octopus traps are usually made of plastic now.

If you look up “takosubo” you will mostly find references to takosubo cardiomyopathy (“broken heart syndrome”). In a nutshell, this is a condition that sometimes affects people who have experienced sudden, high levels of stress. The left ventricle of the heart contracts dramatically, forming a shape which Japanese cardiologists compared to an octopus pot. This often happens to otherwise healthy people after the loss of a loved one, thus the poetic sobriquet.

The image of octopuses nestling, peaceful and content in their little caves, was not lost on Matsuo Bashō — the great poet, and insightful observer of the human condition.

Mere octopus traps,

Evanescent dreams beneath

A midsummer moon.

蛸壺やはかなき夢を夏の月

(1688)

HAND or EYE