Valerie J. Fletcher
Published: 2004
Total Pages: 244
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"One of the most versatile artists of the modern era, Isamu Noguchi explored many areas of art and design. Both Isamu Noguchi: Master Sculptor and the exhibition of the same name, which this book accompanies, focus on his sculpture as the nexus of his creativity. From the late 1920s through the mid-1980s, Noguchi changed direction frequently and delighted in exploring diametrically opposed ideas and styles. In her essay, Valerie J. Fletcher examines Noguchi's use of many different materials and explores the reasons underlying his diverse practice. Situating his sculptures within their historical and art-historical contexts, Dr. Fletcher seeks to dispel the previous limited interpretation of Isamu Noguchi as a Japanese American artist, instead redefining him as one of the first truly global artists of the modern era. Noguchi worked in modes inspired by many cultural sources - he became familiar with utopian ideals while working in Paris, studied traditional calligraphic drawing in Beijing, and learned to model clay sculptures in Kyoto. During World War II, the rise of anti-Japanese sentiment precipitated a period of seclusion and introspection. He adopted some of the principles of Surrealism and created the remarkable Lunars, which have rarely been seen, followed by his delicate, interlocking compositions in slabs of slate and marble. After the war Noguchi again traveled around the world, finding inspiration in monuments of all kinds, ranging from Stonehenge in England to Hindu architecture in India. From the 1960s onward, Noguchi maintained studios in the United States and in Japan, while also working on garden environments and urban monuments in many cities. In his late sculptural works he achieved subtle and sophisticated syntheses of nature with artifice, the organic with the geometric, intuition with intellect. His sculptures express his passionate conviction that art can enrich ordinary lives and transcend national, religious, and ethnic barriers." --