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red stripe #262 1988 24 x 18 cm, hand woven ramie, linen, silk, rubbed with brick |
"Many of my pieces, once woven by hand, are laid down outdoors on the ground or on a rock. I then rub them carefully with a stone or brick. I want to touch the earth through this process, to trace the texture of the ground". Chiyoko Tanaka
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upper: six squares, indigo blue, W #306 1994 lower: six squares, indigo blue, RF #305 1994 |
Chiyoko Tanaka, born 1941 Kyoto Japan, is a weaver who thinks about her work philosophically, comparing it to the human condition. British curator,
Lesley Millar's, essay about Tanaka is included in the
Telos portfolio about the artist
and informs this post. The images of Tanaka's work are from that portfolio and from
Art Textiles of the World Japan also published by Telos.
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six squares indigo blue W #306 detail |
Chiyoko Tanaka uses linen, silk,
and ramie threads. She lays out a long warp which gradually disappears
during the weaving process, covered by the weft.
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Trace of a Leaf #151 1988 |
She considers the vertical warp threads to represent time and the horizontal weft threads to represent space.
The
crossing points of warp and weft physically disappear from view, but
continue to exist as integral to the fabric. The accumulation of the
weft threads represents time passing. When she weaves, she
thinks about the process as one of transformation.
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Trace of a Leaf #151 detail |
By grinding her newly woven cloth with earth, she exposes that original warp. She unveils the essence of the fabric.
"I feel that my woven work is about time and the human condition." Chiyoko Tanaka
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red stripes on white stripes #646 and #647. both 1985 |
Sometimes, instead of
grinding her finished fabrics, she permeates them with mud or oil. Tanaka distresses her fabrics, as if they were human beings going through a
life time of both happy days and days filled with hard ships.
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Trace of White Line #641 above, White Line #642 below, both 1985 |
"I want to see a spirituality behind a piece of my work." Chiyoko Tanaka
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Black Stains on Deep Green Stripes #52 1990 |
Tanaka uses bricks of clay from different parts of the world. The
brick is rubbed into the back of the fabric until it changes colour and
at the same time, the face of the material takes on the patina of the
ground.
It's like a performance.
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Three Squares, Blue Threads, Sienna #281 1997 |
The structural integrity of the warp and weft is revealed. We can see time passing with the erosion of materials, but it is all done in the present moment.
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Three Squares, Blue Threads and Gray, #671 1997 |
Tanaka's work makes us aware of time passing, "neither looking for death, nor denying it, but accepting its place in the cycle of renewal" Lesley Millar
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left: red earthy clay #200 1985, right: permeated black #400 1986 |
Chiyoko Tanaka has an intimacy with nature. She lives on the outskirts of Kyoto, close to natural space. She has an
awareness of the tempo of the natural world and this is the basis of her
work.
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Permeated Black #400 1986 |
When mud is used as a dye, it is left for a period of time so that it can 'permeate' the cloth. Time is one of Tanaka's most important materials.
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wall: Blue #100-2 1983, floor: White, B #100-1 2983 |
What are you weaving, Chiyoko?
"I am weaving time"
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white mud cross, red thread #652 1992 19 x 19 cm hand woven ramie |
"At the still point of the turning world.
...neither from nor towards.
At the still point, there the dance is." T S Eliot
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mud dots on brown stripes #742, hand woven linen, ramie, dyed with mud 2009 |
She is represented by
Brown Grotta source of the above image. (the most recent I could find)
Thanks for sharing this her work and aesthetic is so interesting, a very inspiring post.
ReplyDeleteI can see why you love her work -- she is weaving time, you are stitching it
ReplyDeleteI liked them all., with the passage of time the taste of customers is changing to a great extent as can see the image of forefathers likes in today's style..
ReplyDeleteI'm sure you"ve seen this but incase you haven't..... https://youtu.be/m0bd0txXzB8
ReplyDelete