Recently, there was an art display installed on the McCarthy Mall of the University of Hawaii at Manoa campus. It started on a Friday with a giant, caterpillar like tube of textile slinking across the green grass that was big enough for a person of moderate height to walk through with out stooping. It seemed like about a 50-50 ratio for people walking through it or not. On Monday morning there were an additional number of smaller textile pieces dispersed around the mall. People were bemused and confused by this display. I heard a lot of comments along the lines of: “What is it?” “What does it mean?” “I don’t get it.” What’s the point?” The point, you fools, is to slightly skew your concept of reality, to challenge your mind, to make you think, and maybe to inspire your imagination with a sense of playful wonderment. The point is that there is no point other than the point that you, the observer, make it out to be. So, I walked through the hole in the giant worm and marveled at how incredibly dull people can be.
From the January 2012, Manoa Arts & Minds newsletter:
Life in Colors in Hawai‘i 2012
University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa’s Commons Gallery,
Art Building
January 17 – 27
Mon – Fri 10:30 am – 4:00 pm, Sunday 12 noon – 4:00 pm
Academy Art Center at Linekona,
Honolulu Academy of Arts
January 15 – February 15
Mon – Sun from 8:00 am – 9:00 pm
Art Building
January 17 – 27
Mon – Fri 10:30 am – 4:00 pm, Sunday 12 noon – 4:00 pm
Academy Art Center at Linekona,
Honolulu Academy of Arts
January 15 – February 15
Mon – Sun from 8:00 am – 9:00 pm
The University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa and the Academy Art Center at Linekona present “Life in Colors in Hawai‘i” by the internationally renowned textile artist, Akihiko Izukura, from Kyoto, Japan. “Life in Colors” is exhibited at two locations—both with indoor and outdoor displays; the show features impressive large-scale textile installations, splashes of color on the landscape, as well as innovative examples of his natural dyeing and weaving. The philosophy behind Izukura’s art pieces is based on sustainability and the desire to improve the surrounding environment and hand it down to the next generation in a better state than it is now. In conjunction with the show, Izukura offers personalized Senshokudō [dyeing and weaving] workshops at the Academy Art Center at Linekona and a public lecture at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa.
Hawai‘i is an ideal location for “Life in Colors.” The natural beauty of the islands, with its underlying radiance and power, provides inspiration to Izukura, a natural textile artist, who seeks to find a path for people to coexist with nature.
No comments:
Post a Comment