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Akiyama Yo
Photo Tour, 2004

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Work by Akiyama Yo
Above piece
was not part
of the Inax Tile
Museum Exhibit

For more on
Akiyama Yo,
click here

 

Akiyama Yo Exhibition Photo Tour
Inax Tile Museum, Tokoname
May 11 to June 6, 2004

by Robert Yellin
 All Photos by Yellin

Jump to Photo Tour for Murata Gen
In the spring of 2004,
the famous Inax Tile
Museum
in Tokoname
held a special one-man
exhibition of the work
of Akiyama Yo.

Five works in one room
and only one other large
work in a separate space.
Also on view were
mirrored works with his
pieces etched on; the
"canvases" were simply
rear-view and other
assorted mirrors.

Akiyama Yo is a Kyoto artist who stands worlds apart from colorful, traditional Kyo-yaki, in fact, all his work is black and non-functional. Non-functional in the sense it doesn't serve a purpose at the table or tea room, yet Akiyama's work is functional in how it challenges us to think of ceramic art and it's place in society and our minds; that surely serves a "function." He is an extremely important ceramic artist in Japan, and the world.

Akiyama's work is profound in its size, conception, and forms; all created with the theme of disintegration in nature and how life returns to clay. Part of his forming process involves the use of a burner to induce cracks on the large-scale pieces. His work is primitive yet modern, rough yet refined, moody yet uplifting. It appears to have been dug out of the ground after centuries of lying dormant; it has a presence that fills ones imagination for days.

Akiyama is in the Netherlands as I write this, giving a workshop until late September at the
European Ceramic Work Center (EKWC). He will also be part of a group show titled Confronting Tradition: Contemporary Art from Kyoto from September 10 to December 31, 2004, at The Smith College Museum of Art located in Northampton, Massachusetts.

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Below Text by Yo Akiyama
 from the 2004 Athens Olympic's Sculptural Ceramic Art Exhibition

The work titled "Oscillation" consists of a multitude of creviced layers compiled atop one another. I believe that a "crack" not only reveals something about a facade, but also conveys what is happening beneath a surface. In other words, cracks are the ulterior expression of clay's inner nature. In each layered crack are subtle differences in character; when these personalities congregate and interact with one another, the result is a body that "oscillates." Oscillation is the essence of energy, and is something that is passed on and conveyed.

This summer, by overcoming differences in beliefs and circumstances, the city of Athens will become the reverberating manifestation of people joining together to celebrate the joy that is life. And along with moving the hearts of many, the importance of this celebration will spread throughout the world.

I dream my "Oscillation" will resonate with Athens.

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LEARN MORE ABOUT AKIYAMA YO
Below pages show a few more photos of his award-winning work

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