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Toshiko
Takaezu
Potter
In
Japan, the designation Living Treasure recognizes those
artists who achieve mastery of their country's ancient crafts and
traditional skills. America has no similar honorific for its own
artistic masters, but in the case of Toshiko Takaezu, perhaps one
needs to be coined.
As
both an artist and a teacher, Takaezu has enriched and ennobled
her metier to a degree that few other ceramists have achieved. Born
in Hawaii to immigrant parents, she was the product of a number
of cultural influences, all of which conjoined in the singular artistic
sensibility that informs her work. When she sets her hand to even
a simple bowl or pot, the result is an object that evokes the essence
of the disparate elements that have shaped her life: her Japanese
ancestry, her South Pacific childhood and education, her exposure
to Scandinavian design, to name but three.
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Takaezu's
work is infused with the subtlest of artistry. An apparent
simplicity of form and design belies the understated eloquence
of its spiritual and emotional content, which derives in part
from her relationship with the raw material of her creations:
clay itself. She sees the creative process as an
interaction-almost a tactile conversation- between herself
and the clay. And often, she has noted, the
clay has much to say.
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Closed
Form
(at left) from 1966 (at
right) from 1970.
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Omaoma
Puuwai
(Green
Heart), 1988.
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Takaezu
studied under the noted Finnish ceramist Maija Grotell, from
whom she absorbed a deep appreciation for the purity of minimalist
design. In 1955 she joined the faculty of the Cleveland Institute
of Art's ceramics department. That same year she spent eight
months working with master potters in Japan and delving into
the philosophical underpinnings of Zen. Much of the spiritual
significance of her creations would ultimately derive from those
months of immersion in her ancestral culture, as would her teaching
style: demanding, but always generous and inspiring.
Melding her affinities for pure shapes and spare, uncluttered
designs, Takaezu developed the concept of the closed form,
which became her signature style. Nonfunctional objects more
akin to statuary than pottery, her closed form creations
are almost sculptural in intent. Pared down, minimalist variations
of the potter's standard vessels and containers, Takaezu's works
often display glazes of understated ochers and blues. Others
sport colors reminiscent of the lush and vibrant surroundings
of her childhood, with exuberant pinks, greens, and yellows
recalling the tropical flowers of her native Hawaii. |
After
Takaezu left the Institute in 1965, she moved to New Jersey and
joined the faculty of Princeton University, where she taught until
her retirement in 1992. Her work continued to evolve throughout
her career, moving inexorably toward more frequent references to
the natural world and the harmonious relationships within it. Over
the years her creations have been featured in nearly 100 exhibitions
around the world, and she has received honors from, among others,
the National Endowment for the Arts and New York's American Craft
Center, which in 1994 presented her with its Gold Medal Award. Her
work is in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum
of Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts,
Boston, the Smithsonian Institution, and more than a dozen other
museums.
text by
Mark
Gottlieb
Fall 2002
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