Hikaru Yamada (footballer)
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Hikaru Yamada (Japanese: 山田光)(1923-2001) was a Japanese ceramicist, known for co-founding the Young Potter-maker's Collective in
Kyoto Kyoto (; Japanese: , ''Kyōto'' ), officially , is the capital city of Kyoto Prefecture in Japan. Located in the Kansai region on the island of Honshu, Kyoto forms a part of the Keihanshin metropolitan area along with Osaka and Kobe. , the ci ...
and the avant-garde ceramic group
Sōdeisha , the “Crawling through Mud Association,” was founded by Kazuo Yagi and led by Yagi and two other founding members, Hikaru Yamada and Suzuki Osamu. Sodeisha was formed in opposition to the Mingei or folk-craft movement that was the dominan ...
(Crawling through Mud Association). During the course of his career, Yamada's oeuvre evolved considerably, beginning with more functional ceramic vessels and moving on to experiment with non-functional or anti-functional works. By the latter half of the 20th century, however, his style had become far more abstract, with a focus on flat ceramic sculptures.


Early life and education

The son of a Buddhist priest, Yamada was born on December 23, 1923, in
Asagaya is a residential area of Tokyo located in Suginami ward (one of the 23 wards or boroughs of Tokyo) west of Shinjuku. Main access to Asagaya is via the Chūō-Sōbu Line, 12 minutes by train from Shinjuku station. Geography At present the Asagay ...
in Tokyo. To avoid the aftermaths of the Great Kanto Earthquaqke, the family moved to Gifu City, a ceramic center in Japan. He graduated from the Department of Ceramics at Kyoto Higher Polytechnic School (now the
Kyoto Institute of Technology Kyoto Institute of Technology (京都工芸繊維大学, Kyōto Kōgei Sen'i Daigaku) in Kyoto, Japan is a Japanese national university established in 1949. The Institute's history extends back to two schools, Kyoto Craft High School (established i ...
) in 1945.


Kyoto and Sōdeisha

While in Kyoto, Yamada met fellow ceramicist
Kazuo Yagi Kazuo Yagi (八木 一夫, ''Yagi Kazuo,'' 1918–1979) was a Japanese potter and ceramic artist best known for spearheading the introduction of nonfunctional ceramic vessels to the Japanese pottery world. With an innovative ceramicist as his fath ...
through Yagi's father Issō, a renowned ceramicist. In 1946, Yamada and the young Yagi founded the Young Potters' Collective (青年作陶家集団), while still making more functional vessels and continuing to actively enter his work at the national and local salons, namely ''Nitten'' and ''Kyoten'' respectively. Two years later, in July 1948, Yamada and Yagi, along with ceramicists Osamu Suzuki, Tetsu Kano, and Yoshisuke Matsui formed the
avant-garde The avant-garde (; In 'advance guard' or ' vanguard', literally 'fore-guard') is a person or work that is experimental, radical, or unorthodox with respect to art, culture, or society.John Picchione, The New Avant-garde in Italy: Theoretical ...
ceramic group
Sōdeisha , the “Crawling through Mud Association,” was founded by Kazuo Yagi and led by Yagi and two other founding members, Hikaru Yamada and Suzuki Osamu. Sodeisha was formed in opposition to the Mingei or folk-craft movement that was the dominan ...
(translated as "The Crawling through Mud Association). Sōdeisha sought to move beyond the formal limitations of functional ceramic vessels, experimenting with creating a symbiotic fusion of materiality and form, as well as abstraction and creative adaptation of "traditional" ceramic forms. Yamada's work, too, changed during his affiliation with Sōdeisha. By the 1950s, he shifted away from functional vessels, and instead featured narrow, nonfunctional openings. As the years went on, these openings closed altogether, as he began to favor diverse use of shapes and glazes over functionality. His works, together with those by his peers of Sōdeisha, became known internationally and were shown in such international exhibitions as the 1962 Prague International Ceramics Exhibition and the 1972 Faenza International Ceramics Exhibition. In 1961, he received the Japan Ceramic Society Award (日本陶磁協会賞受). Many of his works produced in the latter half of the twentieth century featured flat, rectangular pieces that acted as frames of sorts, featuring round or smaller rectangular perforations that created a viewing experience he referred to as a 'borrowed landscape.' These perforations, often containing smaller moveable pieces, or, in some cases, small balls of clay, allowed viewers to see through his work and perceive the space beyond through a new lens. They create a juxtaposition between the three-dimensional landscape and this two-dimensional deconstruction of the organic and inorganic materials that comprise landscape scenes.


Later years

In 1979, Yamada became a professor at
Osaka University of Arts is a private arts university located in Kanan, Osaka, Kanan, Minamikawachi District, Osaka, Minamikawachi District, Osaka Prefecture, Japan. The university was founded in 1945 as , changing its name to in 1957, and then to in 1964. The univers ...
. During this time, his artistic style changed as he began experimenting with different materials, including black ceramic and palladium silver. This shift in materials was in part a response to the death that year of Yagi, with whom Yamada had remained close throughout the course of their careers. Black pottery was Yagi's signature technique, created by burnishing and firing clay continuously at low temperature in a smoky environment. Yamada had refrained from using it while his friend was alive and began using it himself as an act of homage. The sleek, uniform aesthetic afforded by black pottery allowed Yamada to further deconstruct the concept of the ceramic "vessel" and experiment with the two-dimensionality of various forms, as seen in his 1981 piece, ''Circle Screen, Black Clay, Kokuto''. This work consists of a square piece propped up on a simple plinth of the same material, with a circle cut out of the middle of the square. The form adds further dimensions to the "borrowed landscape" for the viewer, since the bissected and moveable center circular piece creates different perspectives depending on its positioning and the angle at which the viewer peers through the work. Yamada received the Kyoto City Cultural Merit Award in 1995 and was awarded the Kyoto Art and Culture Prize at an exhibition in 2000. He was also named as an Honorary Member of the Japan Craft Design Association (日本クラフトデザイン協会名誉会). Yamada died of pneumonia on November 29, 2001, in Kyoto at age 77.


Legacy

Yamada's works are held in museum and gallery collections around the world, including the
Mori Art Museum The is a contemporary art museum founded by the real estate developer Minoru Mori (1934–2012) in the Roppongi Hills Mori Tower in the Roppongi Hills complex both of which he built in Tokyo, Japan. The exterior architect of the museum's gall ...
, The Newcastle Art Gallery in
Australia Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a Sovereign state, sovereign country comprising the mainland of the Australia (continent), Australian continent, the island of Tasmania, and numerous List of islands of Australia, sma ...
, and the Meguro Museum of Art. Sōdeisha has had an enduring legacy both within Japan and on an international scale, with many contemporary ceramicists fusing techniques and forms inspired by the group in their own work, such as hand-building and experimentation with two-dimensionality. In 2017, the
National Museum of Ireland The National Museum of Ireland ( ga, Ard-Mhúsaem na hÉireann) is Ireland's leading museum institution, with a strong emphasis on national and some international archaeology, Irish history, Irish art, culture, and natural history. It has thre ...
held a large exhibition, titled ''Shadows of Sōdeisha'', in celebration of the 60th anniversary of relations between Japan and Ireland. This exhibition featured contemporary works by both Japanese and Irish artists, positioning Yamada as one of the forerunners of the movement and demonstrating the transnational scope of Yamada's and his contemporaries' impact on the international pottery scene.Whitty, Audrey. "Shadows of Sodeisha." ''Irish Arts Review'' 34, no. 1 (Spring 2017): 72-73


References

{{Authority control 1923 births 2001 deaths Japanese ceramists Artists from Tokyo