| Kazuo
Kadonaga’s works in bamboo, wood, paper and glass are ageless
and elemental. All of the objects are made of natural substances, which
the artist manipulates in a reverent way, carefully revealing the essence
of the material. I am not interested in creating beautiful objects,
Kadonaga says. What is of interest to me is discovering and disclosing
the (innate) beauty of natural materials.
In the aftermath
of the Second World War, Kadonaga was born in Japan into a family that
had owned vast cedar forests and lumber mills since the beginning of
the 20th Century. It was assumed that he would participate in the family
business of dealing with wood. In fact, this did happen but not at all
in the expected way.
Instead of becoming
a businessman, Kazuo became an artist, first a painter, then a sculptor.
His subject matter, in painting, was trees. I had taken trees for granted,
he says. When I began to study them in paintings I decided I should
work directly with the material of the trees, to explore different ways
of looking at a tree, not to take a tree for granted. Through cutting
and sometimes burnishing or shaving tree trunks myriads of times he
exposes the vital heart of the tree.
These pieces,
which were conceived in Japan, have traveled widely in the United States,
Mexico and Europe for a period of years. Time, climate and distance
are important factors in the process of natural transformation occurring
to these works that swell and shrink with moisture and dryness. Climatic
variation actually subtly changes the structure and appearance of the
work, causing the wood, bamboo and paper to reveal more and less according
to conditions of humidity.
Kadonaga’s
most recent works are luminous mounds of solid silica. The artist approaches
glass as he does other materials, with the intent of allowing the material
to speak for itself. Rather than blowing, casting or coloring the glass,
he simply heats the silica and releases it in a molten stream into a
receptacle/kiln. Here he permits it to slowly grow into a billowing
form, weighing about a ton. The glass then takes as much as a month
to fully harden.
In
the different media that he employs, Kadonaga maintains the same exploration
of essence and integrity of form. Whether it is propped timber bamboo,
a geologic formation of handmade paper or undulations of glass, his
sculptures are objects of contemplation. Through meaningfully placing
and lighting the work, Kadonaga creates a still, meditative garden within
the space of the gallery.
SUSANNA
MEIERS
Curator El Camino College Art Gallery
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