photo: WATANABE Osamu
‘Flower Vase,’ Bronze
Artist | HASUDA Shugoro |
---|---|
Year | 2009 |
Material/ Technique | copper |
Size/ Duration | H24.3 × W4 × D4.8cm |
Copyright Notice | © HASUDA Sue |
Year of acquisition/ donation | 2010(寄付採納年月日:2010/08/17) |
Description | Born in Kanazawa, Ishikawa, Japan in 1915. Died in Kanagawa in 2010. Hasuda Shugoro, bor n in Kanazawa in 1915, graduated in design and painting from Ishikawa Prefectural Industrial School and entered the metal casting section in the craft department of Tokyo School of Fine Arts in 1933. Hasuda considered craft to be a form of fine art and quickly obtained an excellent reputation for his work. His series of “Square Vases,” begun in 1960, solidified that reputation. Hasuda’s dynamic formal sense led him to go beyond craft and create large, ambitious sculptural monuments placed in outdoor environments. He received the Order of Cultural Merit in 1991. The “Square Vase” series is representative of the work of Hasuda Shugoro, an artist who revolutionized the world of traditional Japanese metal craft and elevated it to a pure contemporary art form. Hasuda was attracted by the soft textures of wood in Japanese architecture, and the ridge lines of his "Square Vases" have an organic appearance. The flat surfaces of the "Square Vases" bring out the complex material qualities of different metals, shudo (red copper), rogin (hazy silver), and bronze, and create a strong visual impact. The formal beauty of Hasuda’s "Square Vases" is concentrated in the original forms he produced for casting. The 117 originals, which were kept by the artist, resemble the forms of the monuments and environmental art projects that he began to produce in the 1970s. |
NOTES
This Collection Data page contains the works and materials in the collection of 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa, as of April 1, 2018.
Artists are listed alphabetically by artist’s surname.
Works and materials by the same artists are listed according to the date of the work in principle.
Works whose dates are unidentified are listed at the end of each item. Some works are not listed according to the date of work due to their relations.
The data of works and materials are listed in order of title, production year, material/technique/form, dimensions, donor’s name, copyright holder and credit for photograph.
Dimensions are given by height (H) x width (W) in centimeters for plane work, and height (H) x width (W) x depth (D) in cm for 3-D work. Diameter (Ø) is used for circular work.
For the name of country or city, the name currently used in English is listed in principle.