Curatorial Text / Kostka Gallery / Tamiko Kawata (JP): A Quiet Room
GALLERY KOSTKA
presents
the exhibition
TAMIKO
KAWATA (US/JAP): A QUIET ROOMcurator:
Zuzana Jakalová
opening: 7. 8., 7pm
exhibition duration: 7. 8. – 31. 8.
2014
At the
turn of the 18th and 19th century, Motoori Norinaga contemplated the great work
of Japanese literature, the novel the Tale of Genji by a lady-in-waiting
Murasaki Shikibu written at the turn of the first and second millennium AD. He
then coined a name for a phenomenon that became an important notion in the
history of Japanese thought and literature: mono no aware. Although the meaning
of the phrase varied over the centuries and with different interpretations, it is often characterized,
following Buddhist and Confucian traditions, as wistfulness or nostalgia over
the transience of all things and phenomena in life. It also entitles the fact,
that this transience is a life’s constant.
Within her work, American artist of Japanese
origin Tamiko Kawata often refers to the traditions of her homeland. One could
say, that mono no aware is something that Kawata is naturally updating in her
practice. Used things or recycled materials are the center of her attention:
newsprint paper, toilet rolls, cardboard, plastic bags. All this is not
presented as the final stage of matter in our consumer society; it is rather a
starting point, inspiration and medium for her large-scale installations and
objects. Accumulating, collecting and multiplicating materials that have long passed
their date of expiry are incorporated into Kawata’s works as effective tools
for transformation of the gallery environment as well as for life environments.
For Kawata, recycling is not only an option
to highlight the environmental insensitivity of society; her practice is not primarily
eco-activist. Rather, it is trying to create a personalized
approach to the world of things and
materials, to find an intimate relationship to something that has seemingly
lost its value, to things that illustrate the temporality and transience of the
world. It is this approach that actually makes even her large-scale
installations change into atmospheric and immersive environments with a strong
emotional appeal.
A
Quiet Room transforms the space
of Kostka Gallery in a similar logic: it creates a quiet, meditative place;
necropolis of old materials, yet still new life arises here. A paper waterfall
forms a kind of backdrop to a sculptural paraphrase of the Japanese domestic
hearthstone, the center of family life, home, peace, evenings spent together
with loved ones. What more is there to ask from mono no aware, than to stop and
just be a part of, at least for a while.
--
Tamiko Kawata (1936*) is a Japanese artist
currently based in New York, USA. She studied sculpture in Tokyo
at Tsukuba University. Her works have been presented at numerous exhibitions
around the world such as Rockland Center for the Arts NY, NoHo
Gallery NY, Brown Grotta Arts Chicago, Takano Art Gallery Tokyo and
A.I.R. Gallery NY. She has received several awards, such as the Blue
Mountain Center for the Arts Residency Award, the Pollock/Krasner Foundation
Grant and the New York Foundation for the Arts. Her main focus is on
sculpture and installations made from everyday materials and environmental
issues.
Tamiko Kawata's show A Quiet Room
was possible thanks to the Foundation for Contemporary Art.
--
Open
daily 1pm – 8pm - Voluntary admission
fee
Guided
tours and workshops for schools or other groups are available upon request.
Contacts
and more information:
Zuzana
Jakalová – Curator of the MeetFactory AiR Program
zuzana@meetfactory.cz + 420 776 232 924
Christina
Gigliotti - PR and Marketing
christina@meetfactory.cz + 420 776 798 202
MeetFactory is supported in 2014 by a grant from the City of Prague
amounting to 6.500.000 CZK.