Description

Disappear V - Geometric design by Sawako Kaijima

Galerie Mingei represents Tanabe Chikuunsai IV in France.

The works in the Disappear series, as well as the work Hanamushin, are the fruits of a collaboration between Sawako Kajima and Tanabe Chikuunsai IV. Sawako Kaijima is an Assistant Professor at Harvard University's Graduate School of Design and an Adjunct Professor at the Radcliffe Institute. She has also taught at the Singapore University of Technology and Design. Her research is focused on computer science applications in architecture and engineering.

The geometric complexity of these works is the result of a stable structure that was made possible by numerous small resin molds produced by a 3D printer. Tanabe Chikuunsai IV subsequently intervened to construct the final form by inserting strips of bamboo between the molds and the latter are removed once the work is finished. The bamboo thus breathes "life" into a digital image, and acquires the aspect of a special and remarkable material that is simultaneously out of time yet pregnant with a future. Disappear and Hanamushin are expressions of an artistic sensibility rooted neither in architectural models nor traditional works, but are atypical creations that manifestly have a place in a pertinent movement in contemporary art today.

After a successful first event in November of 2015, Galerie Mingei is honored to be presenting this Japanese artist's second solo exhibition in France.
Tanabe Chikuunsai IV (born Takeo in 1973) is the son of Chikuunsai III, who passed away in 2014. His first artist's name (gō) was Shouchiku, which means "little bamboo". Since April of 2017, he has carried the title Chikuunsai - that of his father, grandfather and great-grandfather - which means "bamboo cloud", and he represents the fourth generation of this dynasty of weavers.
Tanabe's family is based in Sakai (Osaka Prefecture). His mother, Mitsuko Tanabe (born in 1944) and his uncle, Yota Tanabe, are also weavers. The Tanabe family is very well known in Japan and enjoys an immense privilege: they exhibit every year in the Takashimaya department stores, and have done so without interruption since 1915.
This young artist was initiated into the arts of wickerwork weaving at a very early age, learning first from his father, and then studying fine arts at the Osaka City Crafts High School (1991). He has a degree in sculpture from Tokyo Art University (1999), and is also a graduate of the Bamboo Arts Craft Center of Oita Prefecture (2001). His international activities distinguish him from other bamboo artists. He has been an ambassador for Japanese wickerwork and has shown and given demonstrations all over the world, including in Australia, Korea, the Netherlands, New Zealand, the United States, Switzerland, France, Belgium, Russia, Finland, and Brazil.
Chikuunsai IV creates two kinds of bamboo works. The first, which are made using traditional techniques transmitted from generation to generation, are functional objects destined for used in ikebana and in the tea ceremony. He remains faithful to those traditions, and is currently passing his art on to future generations by teaching eight disciples and his three children. His ten-year-old daughter is already giving her first demonstrations.
His other works fall squarely into the realm of contemporary creation. Tanabe Chikuunsai IV is an artist of his time who expresses his individuality through various organic sculptural forms using Tiger bamboo and Black bamboo along with other natural materials. Both his functional and contemporary works are part of many notable international private and public collections. He has been awarded many prizes in Japan as well as abroad, and was the recipient of the prestigious Lloyd Cotsen Bamboo Prize in the United States in 2007.
Since 2015, he has produced a number of monumental installations: at the MET in New York, the Japan House in Sao Paulo, Takashimaya in Tokyo, the MNAA-Guimet in Paris, the Château de la Celle-Saint-Cloud, and the Domaine de Chaumont-sur-Loire (through November 2018), among other places.
A catalog with photographs by Japanese artist Tadayuki Minamoto will accompany the exhibition.


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