Isamu Noguchi (1904–1988)
Isamu Noguchi (1904–1988)
Isamu Noguchi (1904–1988)
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Isamu Noguchi (1904–1988)
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Isamu Noguchi: Modern Japanese Ceramic Practice
Isamu Noguchi (1904–1988)

Geta Dish

Details
Isamu Noguchi (1904–1988)
Geta Dish
incised with the artist's hiragana [no] symbol and a square '?' (on the underside)
Bizen stoneware
5 5/8 x 9 ¾ x 6 1/8 in. (14.3 x 24.8 x 15.6 cm.)
Executed circa 1952. This work is unique.
Provenance
The artist and Stable Gallery, New York
Dr. and Mrs. Dan Holbrooke, New York, circa 1955
Private collection, New York, by descent from the above, 2009
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
S. Takiguchi, S. Hasegawa and I. Noguchi, Isamu Noguchi: 1931/50/51/52, Japan, 1953, no. 62 (illustrated).
D. Botnick and N. Grove, The Sculpture of Isamu Noguchi, 1924-1979: A Catalogue, New York and London, 1980, p. 62, no. 347 (illustrated).
L. A. Court and B. Winther-Tamaki, Isamu Noguchi and Modern Japanese Ceramics: A Close Embrace of the Earth, Washington, D.C., 2003, n.p. (illustrated).
Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, The Isamu Noguchi Catalogue Raisonné, digital, ongoing, no. 347 (illustrated).
Exhibited
Kamakura, Japan, Museum of Modern Art, Isamu Noguchi, September-October 1952.
The Arts Club of Chicago, Noguchi: Sculpture and Scroll Drawings, November-December 1955.

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Isabella Lauria
Isabella Lauria

Lot Essay

Isamu Noguchi had three brief encounters with ceramics during his career: five months in Kyoto in 1931; one week in Seto in 1950; and several months in both Kita-Kamakura and Bizen in 1952. A Japanese-American artist who spent most of his life in the United States, Noguchi had a poetic relationship with the Japanese earth, writing in 1952: “I have only made pottery in Japan, never elsewhere. I think the earth here and the sentiment are suited to pottery” (I. Noguchi, quoted in R. Harle, “Isamu Noguchi and Modern Japanese Ceramics: A Close Embrace of the Earth (review)," Leonardo, vol. 37, no. 3, 2004, pp. 254-255).
On his third trip, to Kita-Kamakura and Bizen, Noguchi visited friends and ceramicists who not only provided him access to their kilns, but also guided his practice. Home to one of the oldest pottery making techniques in Japan, the city of Bizen has a distinctive ware characterized by a hidasuki surface, which burnishes straws to create linear marks across the surface. These can be seen across the center of the Geta Dish, fired in a wood kiln by Noguchi’s host in Bizen, Kaneshige Toyo. Similarly, Noguchi created Face Dish while staying with ceramicist Kitaoki Rosanjin in Kita-Kamakura. The Kita-Kamakura period ceramics are distinguished by an inscribed signature of the Japanese Hiragana symbol for the sound “no”, shortening the artist’s name to the sound of the first syllable. 600 kilometers east in Bizen, Noguchi would also inscribe his Geta Dish with this signature. Thus, both of these rare objects speak to Noguchi's deep intimacy with his cultural history and willingness to say "no" to the mechanical commercialization of traditional handmade craft.

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