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Forelesning, Workshop

Chiku'unsai i bambusskogen
Chiku'unsai i bambusskogen

Chiku’unsai IV Tanabe: Bamboo Artist

Chiku’unsai IV Tanabe, fjerdegenerasjons bambuskunstner fra Japan, holder selvpresentasjoner og workshops på KHiO fredag 2. mars og lørdag 3. mars. Selvpresentasjonene er åpne for publikum, workshopene har begrenset antall plasser og krever påmelding via Japans ambassade i Norge.

Program

Fredag 2.mars: Åpen forelesning i Auditoriet kl. 10.30 / Workshop for påmeldte kl. 13.30, oppmøte i resepsjonen kl. 13.15.
Lørdag 3.mars: Åpen forelesning i Auditoriet kl. 10.30/ Workshop for påmeldte kl. 13.30, oppmøte i resepsjonen kl. 13.15.

Programmet er arrangert av den Japanske ambassaden i Norge i samarbeid med avdeling Kunst og håndverk/fagområde for metall.

Følg link for påmelding til workshop.

About the artist

Fourth-generation Tanabe Chiku’unsai was born in 1973 in Sakai city, Osaka prefecture as the second son of third-generation Chiku’unsai.

Being exposed to bamboo since his childhood, he aspired to work with nature and bamboo. After graduating from the Art course at Osaka City Kogei High School he went on to study sculpture at the Fine Arts Department of Tokyo University of the Arts, where he created bamboo sculptures using black bamboo. Upon graduation, he spent two years learning about weaving, assembling and designing bamboo pieces at the Oita Prefectural Bamboo Craft Training Center in Beppu city. After that he returned to his family home in Sakai, Osaka and learned bamboo craft from his father, third-generation Chiku’unsai.

There are two categories of works that represent fourth-generation Tanabe Chiku’unsai. The first is traditional works that inherit the techniques and spirit of his forefathers. He presents such works mainly at the Japan Traditional Art Crafts Exhibition, while holding private and group exhibitions in Osaka, Tokyo and other cities.

The second category is three-dimensional bamboo installations with powerful modern elements. His installations are created with the concept “Art that Remains in Our Memories” and are displayed at different venues and in various forms. In 2015 he created the “Beyond connection” installation at the Domaine de la Celle Saint-Cloud located some 10 kilometres north of the Versailles. In 2016 he became the first Japanese to exhibit an installation, titled “Godai”, at the Guimet Musuem. The installation represented a world where the five elements that make up our world intertwine.

In 2001 he was invited to the Philadelphia Museum of Art Craft Show, and his works were purchased by the museum. After that his works found their way into the collections of museums around the world, including the Museum of Fine Arts (Boston), the Seattle Art Museum, the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, the British Museum and the Guimet Museum, where they are exhibited.

In 2012 he was selected and commended for his work by the National Policy Unit of the Cabinet Secretariat as part of the Global Messengers of “Japan” Project. Following that he was sent by the Cabinet Office to conduct demonstrations at the Musée des arts décoratifs in Paris and the Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) in New York.

In 2017 he succeeded to the title of Tanabe Chiku’unsai IV.