Yang Kun Smooth Signature Grade Rhodesian Handmade Briar Pipe, New

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Description

Over the past few decades, the world of pipes has grown exponentially, with artisans from ever more diverse backgrounds and locales emerging and thriving. But despite the differences in cultures that this expansion implicates, some things, it seems, are universal. Chinese pipe maker Yang Kun was an artist working in film and television until, one day, a friend showed him a book detailing the life and pipes of Sixten Ivarsson. In that moment, something clicked for Yang, in much the same way that countless individuals have been “awakened” upon an encounter with Ivarsson’s work. And, like so many others over the past 8 decades, Yang’s encounter moved him toward pipe making as a vocation.

In the years that followed, Yang immersed himself in artisan pipe making. He undertook an apprenticeship with Chinese master Hongjian Qiu, built a workshop of his own, and carefully studied the greats of pipe making, past and present. Sixten Ivarsson, Bo Nordh, Jorn Micke, Lars Ivarsson, S. Bang, and Jess Chonowitsch were sources of inspiration, but so too were Yang’s contemporaries in China, such as Ping Zhan, John He, and Sam Cui. In 2012, Yang took on a full-time career as a pipe maker, which he has remained for nearly 15 years, crafting high-grade briars in a shop overlooked by the mountains of Liuzhou.

While Yang Kun has made a name for himself alongside major compatriots like Ping Zhan, John He, and Sam Cui, and while these artisans have influenced Yang’s work, his style is nonetheless very different to each of them. And, in fact, his style is very different to most of the legendary Scandinavian artisans who first inspired him, even to that of Sixten Ivarsson. Instead, his style is somewhere between that of Jess Chonowitsch and Jorn Micke, being closer to that of the latter. In the case of this one, however, the presence of Micke is palpable, though one can’t help but be a little reminded of the late Jess Chonowitsch. A plump and slightly short Rhodesian-Dublin hybrid, the pipe’s bowl has that explosive, “mushrooming” relationship to the shank that Chonowitsch’s pipes were well known for. The grain, of course, is stunning to the extent that one might easily mistake the pipe for one of the late Danish master’s, and it is unsurprising that the pipe earned Yang’s highest grade for his own pipes, the Signature.

 

Details:

Length: 5.5″ / 139.7mm

Bowl Width: 0.77 / 19.55mm

Bowl Depth: 1.54″ / 39.11mm

Weight: 3.1oz / 88g

Additional information

Weight 15 oz
Condition New
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