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Events

Hard Bodies: Contemporary Japanese Lacquer Sculpture

Hard Bodies: Contemporary Japanese Lacquer Sculpture

Exhibitions
THIS EVENT TOOK PLACE BETWEEN
October 31, 2021 – January 23, 2022
Where
Museum of Art
Ulla R. and Arthur F. Searing Wing

Since Neolithic times, craftspeople across East Asia have used the sap of the lacquer tree (Toxicodendron vernicifluum) to coat and bond together wood, bamboo, textiles, and ceramics to make articles for daily and ritual use. The natural polymer refined from the sap forms a durable, waterproof surface that protects and beautifies. Lacquerware was — and continues to be — prized for its lustre, which artists learned to accentuate over the centuries with inlaid gold, silver, mother-of-pearl, and other precious materials.

Since the late 1980s, this tradition has been challenged. A small but enterprising circle of lacquer artists have pushed the medium in entirely new and dynamic directions by creating large-scale sculptures, artworks that are both conceptually innovative and superbly exploitive of lacquer’s natural virtues.

Organized by the Minneapolis Institute of Art, the thirty-three works by sixteen artists comprise the first-ever comprehensive exhibition of contemporary Japanese lacquer sculpture. All are drawn from the Clark Collections at Mia, the only collection in the world to feature this extraordinary new form.

Kurimoto Natsuki, Japanese, b.1961
The Dual Sun II, 2008
Lacquer and mother-of-pearl on automobile hood
29 1/2 × 49 1/2 × 2 1/4 in. (74.93 × 125.73 × 5.72 cm)
Minneapolis Institute of Art, Gift of the Clark Center for Japanese Art & Culture

Support for this exhibition was provided by the Arthur F. and Ulla R. Searing Endowment; Asian Art Endowment at the John & Mable Ringling Museum of Art; and Chao Ringling Museum Endowment.

Hard Bodies: Contemporary Japanese Lacquer Sculpture was organized by the Minneapolis Institute of Art and toured by International Arts & Artists, Washington, DC

Paid for in part by Sarasota County Tourist Development Tax revenues.