Inoue Manji / David Stanley Hewett

2024年3月14日 - 5月24日
Works
Installation Views
Press release
Inoue Manji / David Stanley Hewett
March 14 - May 24, 2024
 
 

Chelsea Gallery Launches Special U.S.-Japan Exhibition To Mark Pioneering Japanese Craft Project

 
In celebration of Asia Week New York 2024, Onishi Gallery (521 W. 26th Street) is proud to announce its next exhibition “Inoue Manji / David Stanley Hewett,” bringing together the work of two prominent artists based in Japan, one Japanese and one American. The exhibition opens on March 14.
 
“Inoue Manji / David Stanley Hewett” is presented by Onishi Gallery to mark the inauguration of KOGEI USA, a nonprofit dedicated to revitalizing Japan’s world-famous KOGEI (art crafts) under the banner Securing Our Heritage, Nurturing Our Traditions, Building Our Futures. The exhibition promotes one of KOGEI USA’s key goals: the formation of new creative links between Japanese and non-Japanese masters who share a passion for preserving and handing on the best traditional hand-made arts.
 
The two artists’ practices convey contrasting aspects of Japanese visual expression. Inoue Manji—a “Living National Treasure” and the embodiment of his country’s dedication to traditional philosophies, materials, and techniques—uses the purity of hakuji (white porcelain) to create works that offer a new perspective on Japanese minimalism. David Stanley Hewett, an American living in Japan, works in the medium of finest Japanese gold leaf applied to canvas or wood, preserving and re-imagining a heritage of gorgeous decoration with its roots in elite samurai culture.
 
Born in 1929, Inoue started his career learning to make colorful enameled ware, but soon decided to specialize in hakuji, porcelain formed by pouring transparent glaze over white clay and firing it at a high temperature. Unforgivingly self-critical, Inoue demands absolute perfection in shape, rejecting even a millimeter of distortion in pursuit of his conviction that “Hakuji expresses itself through form rather than added decoration.” His pieces typically exemplify this truth through refined curves and pure rounded forms rather than distracting surface decor. Lately, however, he has begun to use a range of colored glazes. He continues to work into his nineties, creating masterpieces that affirm the timeless beauty of porcelain.
 
Inoue has received countless awards and honors, culminating in his designation in 1995 as a “Living National Treasure” of Japan in recognition of his contribution to his country’s intangible cultural heritage.
 
Hewett epitomizes the pre-modern samurai ideal of the warrior accomplished in the arts of peace. Born in 1967 and an honor graduate of the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve, Parris Island, he has resided in Japan for three decades, tirelessly pursuing his lifetime mission to support traditional Japanese art through contemporary practice. His work as an artist has been recognized at the highest levels. In 2017 his painting, Majime, was selected as an official gift from the wife of the Prime Minister of Japan to the First Lady of the United States, where it was inducted into the National Archives. Barrage, a monumental work in acrylic and gold leaf, hangs in the main entrance of the United States Embassy in Tokyo. Hewett’s work is also in the permanent collections of the Ritz Carlton, the Imperial Hotel, Oakwood Premier Tokyo, Okura Hotel Tokyo, the Peninsula Tokyo, and numerous public and private collections around the world.
 
Supported by: Japan Kogei Assciation
Cooperation: The Bank of Saga, Munemasa Brewery
 
For more information or appointments, please email nana@onishigallery.com or call 1.212.695.8035.