1959
Kazuo Okazaki has produced art objects in a variety of media from the end of the fifties to the present. In Japan art that does not fit into conventional categories like painting or sculpture is referred to as an "object." Many of Okazaki’s works are quite small, taking the form of things that are an ordinary part of everyday life like light bulbs, dolls, and coffee cups.
Okazaki made this piece in his late twenties and it was shown in the Yomiuri Independent Exhibition in 1959. The drooping surface, held at the edges and pierced cut into numerous strips, looks like the tanned skin of an animal. Its uncanny form, created by welding thin pieces of brass and copper to steel, has an ambiguous appearance that is difficult to describe. It gives the viewer an uncomfortable feeling that cannot be clearly defined. This illusionistic effect, like a trompe l'œil painting, and the contradictory title, using the word "plane" to describe sculpture, a three-dimensional art, are products of the Anti-Art movement of the time. Here we have a foretaste of the methods that the artist would adopt later, transforming or reversing the nature of familiar things to illuminate hidden areas of our everyday sensibility.
1930-2022
Genre | Sculptures,installations |
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Material/technique | Painted steel, brass, copper |
Dimensions | 161.5×128cm |
Acquisition date | 1998 |
Accession number | 1998-00-0035-000 |
1991
1991
1991
1991
1991
1991
FUKUSHIMA Hideko
1959
SUEMATSU Masaki
1959
SUDA Hisashi
1959
WAKITA Kazu
1959
IKEBE Hitoshi
1959
ONOSATO Toshinobu
1959
FUKUSHIMA Hideko
1959
ONOSATO Toshinobu
1959
KIWAMURA Sojiro
1959
KIWAMURA Sojiro
1959