
| The
Akari Light Sculptures of Isamu Noguchi |
|
One
of the most important artists of the twentieth century, Isamu Noguchi (1904-1988)
expanded the traditional notion of sculpture to include the creation of dance
sets, gardens, playgrounds, fountains and furniture. Within this range of spatial
environment Isamu Noguchi’s Akari lanterns hold a unique place, expressing his
Japanese–American heritage in works designed to enhance the quality everyday life.
Isamu Noguchi was
the son of an American mother, Leonie Gilmour, and a Japanese father, poet Yone
Noguchi. Born in Los Angeles, Noguchi spent his childhood in Japan before returning
to the United States for his education. As a young man he traveled to Paris to
work with sculptor Constantin Brancusi, and he went on to develop his own unique
career as an artist in New York.
After visiting
Japan in 1931 Noguchi began to integrate elements of Japanese art with Western
modernism. Throughout the 1950s Noguchi spent a great deal of time in Japan, embracing
Japanese forms for the design of gardens and sculpture.
|
|
 Akari,
a term meaning light as illumination, but also implying the idea of weightlessness.
In 1951 Isamu
Noguchi visited the Japanese town of Gifu, know for its manufacture of lanterns
and umbrellas from the mulberry bark paper and bamboo. Inspired by the lanterns
illuminating night fishing on the Nagara River, Noguchi designed the first of
his lamps that would be produced by the traditional Gifu methods of construction.
He called these works Akari, a term meaning light as illumination, but also implying
the idea of weightlessness. Extending the concept of illuminated sculpture that
he developed during the 1940s in New York, Noguchi employed abstract shapes to
unite the simplicity of Japanese aesthetics with the principles of contemporary
art and design. More that home furnishing, Akari are light sculptures.
|
|
|
|
"All
that you require to start a home are a room, a tatami, and Akari. "
With the warm glow
of light cast through hand-made paper on a bamboo frame, Isamu Noguchi utilized
traditional Japanese materials to bring modern design to the home. Like the beauty
of falling leaves and the cherry blossom, Noguchi wrote, Akari are "poetic,
ephemeral, and tentative." And he was fond of saying, "All that you
require to start a home are a room, a tatami, and Akari. "
|
<back
|
next page> |
|
|