Tag: Japandi Revisted

Japandí Revisited – Just 10 More Days

Japan Revisited installation
Japandi Revisted installation. Photo by Tom Grotta

We’ve been excited by the reaction to our Japandí Revisited partnership with the Wayne Art Center in Pennsylvania. Attendance has been good to date. Tours of viewers have been scheduled including the Japan America Society of Greater Philadelphia and the American Swedish Historical Museum. There are 10 more days to see the exhibition and the two of us (Tom Grotta and Rhonda Brown) will be at Wayne on January 25, 2025 for the closing reception from 1 pm to 4 pm. 

Japan Revisited installation
Works by Naoko Serino, Helena Hernmarck, Keiji Nio, Kari Lønning. Photo by Tom Grotta

The Ethel Sergeant Clark Smith Gallery, where Japandí Revisited is installed, is airy and full of indirect light. In the exhibition we’ve had the opportunity to place Japanese and Scandinavian works side by side, so viewers can see the affinities for themselves. Flowers by Keiji Nio (JP) is hung next to Kari Lønning’s (NO) work Horn. In an imaginative merger of technology and tradition, Nio takes photographs, silkscreens the images on ribbons that he braids using Japanese technique kumihimo. In Horn, Lønning works with akebia, a vine found in the Northeast US. Horn is the largest work that Lønning has created from akebia.

Japan Revisited installation
Japandi Revisted installation. Photo by Tom Grotta

Agneta Hobin’s Clair de Lune (FI) fans made of steel and mica are displayed next to Oh! Precious by Hirohito Sato-Pijanowski (JP/US)i. Pijanowski’s work is made of glued paper cord. Both works use unusual materials — mica and paper cord — to create shine. Both reflect the exquisite craftsmanship that is another element of Japandí design.

Gudrun Pagter, Masakazu Kobayashi, Merja Winqvist. Photo by Tom Grotta

On another wall is Gudrun Pagter’s (DK) abstract, Framed, of wool, hangs beside Masakazu Kobayashi’s (JP) Bow White of layered silk and aluminum bowseach illustrating a preference for neutrals and primary colors, clean lines, and minimal ornamentation that are a third element of Japandí style.

Japan Revisited installation
Works by Eva Vargö, Masako Yoshida, Kogetsu Kosuge. Photo by Tom Grotta

Eva Vargo’s (SE) Book of Changes and Toshio Sekiji’s (JP) Counterpoint 8 appear on the same wall. In another spot in the gallery, appears Helena Hernmarck’s (SE/US), Shredded Memories series, in which strips of letters by her mother are incorporated into weavings.  Each of these works transforms used paper into art. Each repurposes materials and, central to these cultures’ approaches, each reflects respect for old and cherished items.

Japan Revisited installation
Works by Markku Kosonen, Ulla Maija Vikman, Jiro Yonezawa, Kay Sekimachi. Photo by Tom Grotta

Appreciation for natural materials is the fifth element attributed to Japandí style. The exhibition combines baskets of multiple materials made by artists from several countries. Bamboo, jasmine, walnut and cedar baskets by Hisako Sekijima join ramie works by Noriko Takamiya, and works of jute by Naoko Serino of Japan. Works of handmade paper and twigs by Jane Balsgaard of Denmark are shown as are works of willow with catkins still attached and crowberry root by Markku Kosonen of Finland.

Japan Revisited installation
Works by Mia Olsson, Hideho Tanaka, Jin-Sook So, Hisako Sekijima, Naomi Kobayashi. Photo by Tom Grotta

Hope you get a chance to visit Japandí.

Details through January 25th:
Japandí Revisited: shared aesthetics and influences
Wayne Art Center 
413 Maplewood Avenue
Wayne, PA 19087

Dates: 
Through January 25, 2025

Events:
Curator’s Talk: 
Saturday, January 25, 1:00 – 2:00 pm

Closing Reception:
Saturday, January 25 | 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Gallery Hours:
January 2025 (free admission)
Monday 9:00 am – 5:00 pm
Tuesday 9:00 am – 5:00 pm
Wednesday 9:00 am – 5:00 pm
Thursday 9:00 am – 5:00 pm
Friday 9:00 am – 5:00 pm
Saturday 9:00 am – 4:00 pm
Sunday Closed

Also on exhibit at the Wayne Art Center is Craftforms, an international juried exhibition of contemporary fine craft.


Save the Date: Japandí Revisited in Wayne, PA, December 7, 2024 to January 25, 2025

Willow basket by Mark Kosonen, Indigo banner by Hiroyuki Shindo
54mk Willow Cat Basket, Markku Kosonen sibirica, satix phylicifalia, 7″ x 11.5″ x 11″, 1990
4hsh.1 Wall Hanging, Hiroyuki Shindo, linen, handspun and handwoven, indigo dye, 69″ x 17″ , 1995. Photo by Tom Grotta

It turned out so nice, we decided to do it twice. Three years ago we curated an exhibition at browngrotta arts exploring the inspirations shared by artists in Japan and the Scandinavian countries, Sweden, Finland, Norway, and Denmark. We uncovered so many interesting stories and artistic references among the artists we work with we’ve decided to revisit this topic again this winter at the Wayne Art Center in Wayne, Pennsylvania. Japandí Revisited: shared aesthetics and influences will open on December 7, 2024 and run through January 25, 2025. 

Basket Strings by Birgit Birkkjaer
102bb Woven Art Basket Strings, Birgit Birkkjaer, linen, paper, horsehair, hemp yarn, silk-steel, yarn, glue, 61″ x 35″ x 4″, 2024. Photo by Tom Grotta

The Ethel Sergeant Clark Smith Gallery at the Wayne Art Center is spacious and bright and an inviting space. Vistors to Wayne will see some familiar works alongside new ones, from Birgit Birkkjaer, Hiroyuki Shindo, and Naoko SerinoJapandí Revisited will also feature artists new to our Japandí assemblage, including Shoko FukudaToshiko TakaezuAya KajiwaraKogetsu Kosuge, and Hiroko Sato-Pijanowski.

Åse Ljones and Naoko Serino
Åse Ljones, 16al Dobbel Domino, hand embroidery on linen, stretched on frame, 56.675″ x 57″ x 2.5″, 2015
Naoko Serino, Generating 9, jute, 30″ x 30″ x 7″, 2014. Photos by Tom Grotta

Japandí in design is a fusion style that references shared aspects of Scandinavian and Japanese aesthetics.  “It is the East-meets-West design movement. It blends Japanese artistic elements and wabi-sabi philosophy with Scandinavian comfort and warmth or hygge,” Shanty Wijaya, an interior designer and owner of AllPrace told Architectural Digest in 2023“Both Japanese and Scandinavian design aesthetics are focused on simplicity, natural elements, comfort, and sustainability. It teaches us to find beauty in imperfection, form deep connections to the earth and nature, and enjoy the simple pleasures of life.”   

paper boat sculpture by Jane Balsgaard
38jb Relief, Jane Balsgaard, iron, bamboo, willow, fishing line and handmade plantpaper, 74″ x 18″ x 12″, 2014. Photo by Tom Grotta

There are four elements highlighted in Japandí Revisted — natural materials and sustainability, minimalism, exquisite craftsmanship and, as Wijaya notes, similarities between the Japanese concept of wabi-sabi and the Scandinavian concept of hygge. A respect for materials is found in both cultures. Danish artist Jane Balsgaard spent time in Japan in 1993 and 1998, preparing for exhibits there. Works of paper and twigs were the result. In her work, white paper often contrasts the dark color of the willow twigs.  “Another element in [Balsgaard’s] works that has connection to Japan,” writes Mirjam Golfer-Jørgensen, “is the skeleton, that partly frames the paper, partly combines with the hollows in the constuction, and gives another character to the paper that with a lightness that creates a contrast towards to the hollows.” (Influences from Japan in Danish Art and Design 1870 – 2010, Mirjam Golfer-Jørgensen, Danish Architectural Press, 2013.)

Gudren Pagter and Keiji Nio
5gp Framed, Gudrun Pagter, linen, sisal and flax, 65” x 60”, 2018
14kn Large Interlacing – R, Keiji Nio, nylon fiber, 54″ x 54″ x 15.5″, 2004. Photo by Tom Grotta

These cultures share is an affinity for purity, minimalism, and simplicity. Danish artist Grethe Wittrock’s work includes expanses of twisted paper strands in single colors — minimal and simple yet powerful expressions of what Finnish Designer Alvar Aalto called “the language of materials.” Wittrock observed the similar appreciation for minimalism firsthand when she traveled to Japan and studied with Japanese paper makers and renowned indigo dyer, Shihoko Fukomoto. “I started to uncover what Nordic sensibilities are by living abroad,” Wittrock says. “I lived in Kyoto, and saw an aesthetic in Japanese design similar to the Nordic tradition. You could say that there is an agreement that less is more. As they say in the Nordic countries ‘even less is even more.’” Gudrun Pagter is another Danish artist whose abstract works in primary colors reflect the modernism for which Scandinavia is known. “From the exotic and foreign land we find an aesthetically common understanding of a minimalist idiom,” Pagter says, “an understanding of the core of a composition — that is, cutting off everything ‘unnecessary.’”

Grethe Wittrock and Jiro Yonezawa
Grethe Wittrock , 2gr The Second Cousin, white paperyarn knotted on steelplate, 67” x 78.75”, 2006
Jiro Yonezawa, 100jy Red Fossil 20−4, bamboo, urushi laquer, 22.5” x 21.25” x 21”, 2020. Photo by Tom Grotta

Meticulous craftsmanship is another element heralded in Japandí. Stainless steel fibers are masterfully incorporated into the work of three of the artists in this exhibition. Agneta Hobin of Finland weaves the fine threads into mesh, incorporating mica and folding the material into shapes — fans, strips, and bridges. Jin-Sook So’s work is informed by time spent in Korea, Sweden, and Japan. She uses transparent stainless steel mesh cloth, folded, stitched, painted and electroplated to create shimmering objects for the wall or tabletop. The past and present are referenced in So’s work in ways that are strikingly modern and original.  She has used steel mesh to create contemporary Korean pojagi and to re-envision common objects — chairs, boxes and bowls. Kyoko Kumai of Japan spins the fibers into ethereal, silver landscapes.

Toshio Sekiji and Eva Vargö
Toshio Sekiji, 34ts Counterpoint 8, Korean newspapers; black urushi lacquer, 28″ x 25″ x 4″, 2009
Eva Vargö, 6ev No. 55 (Book of Changes), linen, thread, paper strings, gold leaves, 31.75” x 29.375” x 1.5,” 2019. Photo by Tom Grotta

Several artists in the Japandí exhibition evidence an appreciation for repurposing materials as wabi-sabi envisions. Toshio Sekiji’s works are made of newspapers from Japan, India and the US and even maps from Jerusalem. Paper is a material that creates an atmosphere as well as art. Eva Vargö, a Swedish artist who has spent many years in Japan, describes how washi paper, when produced in the traditional way, has a special quality — light filters through paper from lamps and shoji screen doors creates a warm and special feeling, in keeping with the appreciation of the imperfect embodied in wabi-sabi and wellness and contentment in hygge.

A sneak peek — here’s the Wayne exhibition in 2-D. Photo by Tom Grotta.

We hope you can make it to Pennsylvania this winter!