Skin & Body: Crazing Vessels by Kodai Ujiie: Crazing Vessels by Kodai Ujiie
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Overview
- Exhibition opens September 14. Online Viewing will be live ahead of the exhibition opening on September 12, 2:00 PM. All artwork images will be uploaded at 2:00 PM.
All visitors are welcome Thurs.—Sat. 11:00AM to 6:00PM.
Gallery open by appointment only Mon.—Wed. 11:00AM to 6:00PM.
Ippodo Gallery presents Skin and Body: Crazed Vessels by Kodai Ujiie, the avant-garde artist’s first solo exhibition in the United States.
On display are 46 of Ujiie's newest ceramics, including large jars, vases, and small vessels made from porcelain, celadon and other traditional glazes, and lacquer.
Each artwork relishes in the delight of living, converting clay into an analogy skin, blood vessels, and scales with a renewed sense of body image.
The artist will travel to New York to join Ippodo Gallery for an opening reception and artist talk on September 14, 2023.
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Works
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Distinguished in both Japan and overseas for his unique forms and technical fusions, Kodai Ujiie has developed into a rising star. Frank Feltens, Curator of Japanese Art at the Smithsonian National Museum of Asian Art, says of Ujiie’s Ofukei and Lacquer Tea Bowl: “The bowl reminds me that we intuitively look for the familiar in the unknown.” Ujiie’s novel ceramics are a reminder of the complex and sometimes contentious relationship within ecosystems, be that skin and body or people and the environment. Craft curator, author, and art historian Glenn Adamson, who spoke to Ujiie about his artistry, writes: “The ceramics at once convey the seismic, even traumatic quality of natural catastrophes . . .and radiate a delight in the happenstance, the instinctive energy that only an embrace of accident can bring to art.” Glenn Adamson's full essay is released digitally alongside the online catalogue for Skin and Body: Crazed Vessels by Kodai Ujiie.
Ippodo Gallery is committed to creating shared empathetic, craft-oriented experiences through engagement with Japanese art and culture. We continue to showcase work by living artists that adheres to our mission to cultivate beauty with a consciousness of the fragility of nature and the strength of quiet serenity. Ippodo Gallery has worked directly with over 200 artists and held thousands of exhibitions over three decades. We are grateful to continue to bring contemporary Japanese fine art and sensibility to Western audiences. Keiko Aono founded Ippodo Gallery Tokyo in 1996, with two locations in the heart of Ginza and the residential area of Gotenyama. Daughter Shoko Aono opened Ippodo Gallery in New York in 2008, forging new connections with a global audience. Since then, she continues to witness the timeless cross-cultural impact of Japanese kogei art that transcends language.
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