

38 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3000
admissions@bgc.bard.edu
18 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3023
gallery@bgc.bard.edu
BGC Gallery is currently closed.
38 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3000
admissions@bgc.bard.edu
18 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3023
gallery@bgc.bard.edu
BGC Gallery is currently closed.
Yasuko Tsuchikane
Cooper Union; BGC Visiting Fellow
February 25, 2021
12:15 – 1:15 pm
Yasuko Tsuchikane will give a Brown Bag Lunch presentation on Thursday, February 25, at 12:15 pm. Her talk is entitled “Disentangling the First “Global” Standard of Ceramic Art in Early Postwar Japan.”
The medium of ceramics as aesthetic objects has been found across the globe, yet, is also highly localized in its contextualization and standards of evaluation. The increasing complication of this duality emerged in early post-World War II Japan when the mobility of ceramics became accelerated as publicly displayed exhibits through an internationally traveling exhibition and an assemblage of works brought to Japan from abroad, allowing, for the first time, close comparisons among the latest works from different national origins. At no other time in Japan has the discourse on how to evaluate the artistry of ceramics become so intensely contentious and wide-ranging among collectors, critics, artists, and ceramists. One aspect of the background of these contentions originated in Japan’s modernity, when ceramics came to be largely regarded as a self-contained field of visual art practice (beyond the crafts-fine art binary) and as objects endowed with metaphysical status, symbolizing collective identities in association with a framework of a nation-state against the fast-changing world order in culture and politics. Investigating these discourses against selected points of curatorial decisions made by Fujio Koyama (1900-1975), who was in charge of appointing exhibitors and exhibits in these shows, Tsuchikane hopes to shed light on how the course of “internationalization” took place. The process involved a delicate negotiation with what she terms as Japan’s ceramic nationalism through Koyama’s successive involvement with two ceramic art trends of the twentieth-century West: the boom of Chinese Song dynasty porcelains and the emergence of avant-garde ceramic art by Euro-American artists. Koyama was a world-renowned archaeologist of antique Chinese ceramics, who turned out to be an influential cultural policy maker of the Japanese state and a pioneering international ceramic art curator in Japan. The gradual expansion of his territories of interests from Chinese premodern works to those by Pablo Picasso, Lucio Fontana, and Peter Voulkos will be introduced in the context of two exhibitions that Koyama curated in 1951 and 1964.
38 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3000
admissions@bgc.bard.edu
18 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3023
gallery@bgc.bard.edu
BGC Gallery is currently closed.