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Thursday, November 21, 2024 |
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Cranbrook Art Museum opens 'Toshiko Takaezu: Worlds Within' |
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Toshiko Takaezu with her works at home in Quakertown, New Jersey, 1997. Photo: Bobby Jae Kim. The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Lilane and David M. Stewart Collection, gift of Bobby Jae Kim.
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BLOOMFIELD HILLS, MICH.- Cranbrook Art Museum is the second stop on the national tour of Toshiko Takaezu: Worlds Within. Organized by The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, the exhibition at Cranbrook features approximately 115 objects from public and private collections across the country, including Cranbrooks own collection.
Toshiko Takaezu was a groundbreaking 20th-century abstract artist most celebrated for her prolific output of expressively glazed closed form ceramic sculptures that ranged in scale from palm-sized works to immersive sculptural environments.
Of Okinawan heritage and born in Hawaii she studied at Cranbrook Academy of Art from 1951 to 1953 and then taught in its summer program through 1956. She was drawn to Cranbrook for the chance to study under Maija Grotell, the Finnish ceramics artist and teacher who served as the Academys Ceramics Artist-in-Residence from 1938-1966.
Hawaii was where I learned technique, Takaezu has said. Cranbrook was where I found myself.
In addition to studying with Grotell, Takaezu had the opportunity to study with Marianne Strengell at Cranbrook, the Fiber Artist-in-Residence, providing a rare opportunity to study with two women during a time when academia was dominated by men.
"The exhibition Toshiko Takaezu: Worlds Within showcases the imagination and ambition of her prolific career that is noted for its creative, technical achievements in ceramics as well as for her intuitive painting practice and skilled weavings truly an awe-inspiring world," said Laura Mott, Chief Curator of Cranbrook Art Museum.
Mott continues, "It also reveals a rich personal history of independence and life-long dedication to being an artist. Imagine what it must of been like for a young woman in the early 1950s coming from a plantation life in Hawaii to study far away at Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan. There were few pathways for women to be artists and leaders in education, and once Toshiko discovered it here at Cranbrook, she made it her life story."
This exhibition aims to trace the evolution of Takaezus practice and reframe her as one of the most compelling and conceptually innovative American artists of the last century. It considers the range, depth, and development of Takaezus work with a particular focus on the worlds she conjured within individual forms and environmental installations.
The development of Takaezus hybrid practice over seven decades is being examined, documenting her early student work in Hawaii and at Cranbrook through her years teaching at the Cleveland Institute of Art and later at Princeton University. To represent this evolution, the show presents a series of installations inspired by progressions in Takaezus own lifetime: from a set table of functional wares from the early 1950s to an immersive constellation of monumental ceramic forms from the late 1990s to early 2000s.
The exhibition includes a vast collection of ceramic sculptures including her signature closed forms, Moons, Garden, Seats, and select monumental works from her late masterpiece, the Star Series. It also features a broad selection of her vibrant and gestural acrylic paintings and weavings, many of which have rarely been seen,. Sound also plays an important role in this exhibition as many of Takaezus closed ceramic forms contain unseen rattles.
After its time at Cranbrook, the exhibition will travel to the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (March 2May 18, 2025), the Chazen Museum of Art, University of Wisconsin-Madison (September 8December 23, 2025), and the Honolulu Museum of Art (February 13July 26, 2026).
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