Ceramics, Their Creators, and Japan in Their Most Intimate Aspects
In Mexico, six Japanese artists share life experiences, their relationships with nature, and their ways of connecting with it.
Photo © Luis Garvan
Mexico marks a form of maiden voyage, a baptism of fire for these ceramics and all their components. Assembled in the V.V. Sorry exhibition space by curator Kimberly Wu, six Japanese artists came together as part of the exhibition Familiar Soil. However, these talented individuals are united by more than their nationality or medium of choice.
The use of local raw materials and their transformation close to their source is now demanded by a growing number of players in sustainable agriculture that respects the environment. This sense of rigour can also be transferred to other areas of activity, as is the case for ceramicists Akihiro Nikaido, Hitoshi Morimoto, Takayuki Watanabe, Takeshi Oomura, Tanaka Shigeo, and Yoko Ozawa.
Mixing the practical with pleasure
In Mexico, a country particularly appreciative of artisanal craftsmanship, vases, tea services, bowls, and dishes are arranged in an understated setting, or rather exhibited. When it comes to art objects and arts and crafts, the boundary between the useful and the frivolous and decorative is questioned. In what sense is this categorisation relevant or indeed useful? The pieces brought together by Kimberly Wu examine our relationship to the matter that surrounds us, to the routes we travel every day, and to what this set of routines, collections, and patience creates.
More specifically, as the curator explains, ‘the work is made from clay dug from nearby land by the artists themselves, and tends not to be overtly glazed over before being fired with wood, including in anagama kilns. Any colour appearing on the surface is derived from natural properties and minerals in the soil which are revealed in the firing process.’
The six artists’ practices and creative offerings are different, but the understanding of the creation process gives rise to a sense of unity. Each personal touch adds up to offer the public a patchwork of ways in which the group of artists consider their relationship with their environment, in a subtly personal manner. ‘Everything, including me, the soil, and what I have made, influences the way energy is expressed, and this is the expression of my life as a work.’
Familiar Soil: Japanese Wood-Fired Ceramics, an exhibition at V.V Sorry, Mexico, curated by Kimberly Wu, was held from 21 May until 20 June 2021.
Photo © Luis Garvan
Photo © Luis Garvan
Photo © Luis Garvan
Photo © Luis Garvan
Photo © Luis Garvan
Photo © Luis Garvan
Photo © Luis Garvan
Photo © Luis Garvan
TRENDING
-
The Tattoos that Marked the Criminals of the Edo Period
Traditional tattoos were strong signifiers; murderers had head tattoos, while theft might result in an arm tattoo.
-
Tokyo's Transgender Community of the 1970s Immortalised by Satomi Nihongi
In her series ‘'70S Tokyo TRANSGENDER’, the photographer presents a culture and an aesthetic that are situated on the margins of social norms.
-
Kohei Yoshiyuki, the Voyeur of Tokyo's Voyeurs
The reedition of the publication ‘The Park’ takes us on a night walk through the parks of Tokyo, out in full sight.
-
Modernology, Kon Wajiro's Science of Everyday Observation
Makeup, beard shape, organisation of cupboards and meeting places: all of these details decipher 1920s Tokyoites.
-
Hiroshi Nagai's Sun-Drenched Pop Paintings, an Ode to California
Through his colourful pieces, the painter transports viewers to the west coast of America as it was in the 1950s.