Japan: Art and Its Essence
Japan: Art and Its Essence
Property from an Important Private Collection
Lot Closed
July 26, 01:15 PM GMT
Estimate
3,000 - 5,000 GBP
Lot Details
Description
Property from an Important Private Collection
Ogawa Machiko (b. 1946)
Superlunary (Tsuki no ue)
porcelain, translucent white glaze; fitted wood storage box (tomobako), signed Machi, and with artist's red seal, inscribed Tsuki no ue (Superlunary)
41 cm., 16⅛ in. long (the sculpture)
39 x 59 x 45.5 cm., 15⅜ x 23¼ x 18 in. (the fitted wood storage box)
Hashimoto Gallery, Tokyo
Ogawa Machiko is one Japan’s most celebrated contemporary ceramicists. Renowned for her experimental and inventive approach to clay, Ogawa’s work displays a lifetime fascination with geological forms, mineralogy and the different effects of extreme heat and pressure.
Born in 1946, Sapporo, the largest city of the Hokkaido Prefecture of Japan, Ogawa studied crafts at the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music where she was a student of Fujimoto Yoshimichi (1919-1992), Kato Hajime (1900-1968) and Tamura Koichi (1918-1987). Graduating in 1969, she then went on to study ceramics at l’École Nationale Supérieure des Arts Appliqués et des Métiers d’Art in Paris until 1971, and then in Burkina Faso, West Africa until 1975 where she studied local ceramic techniques. Applying this to her understanding of Africa’s geological forms, Ogawa developed her own unique style creating objects that appear to have emerged from the earth as if hewn from its very depths.