Bio and images
Megumi Esaki expanded her explorations based on traditional
Japanese water basins during her Spring, 2001 residency at
the Creative Glass Center of America. She initially became
interested in the form while working at Pilchuck Glass School
far from her native Japan. "I think many Japanese artists are
influenced by traditional Japanese culture," she says,
adding, "And now young people live in a mixed culture, so
they might feel special nostalgia for old Japanese culture."
The chozubachi, a water container for Japanese gardens
at shrines, temples or tea houses, is traditionally made of
stone, but Esaki casts her compact interpretations in glass.
Some chozubachi are about waist high but the water
basins for tea house gardens (tsukubai or "crouching
basins") are particularly interesting to Esaki although she
does not have the leisure to study the tea ceremony. "I like
the tradition, but is a little difficult for me to enjoy
cha-no-yu (tea ceremony) itself. Maybe in 30 years, I'll be
able to enjoy it." she jokes.
Traditional tsukubai are placed near the ground among
stones and plants, the emblem of a natural pool in a secluded
brook. The low tsukabai forces all users to bend down
in humility making them equal in the ritual of purification.
A bamboo ladle typically rests along the edge of the basin to
scoop up water to cleanse the hands and the mouth of the dust
of the world.
To the Japanese, the chozubachi is the center of the
garden. It should be supported by a strong base conveying a
sense of stability and endurance. It is the symbol of purity
in the spiritual as well as the physical dimension. As she
explores glass to both contain and to suggest water, Esaki
becomes increasingly intrigued by the spiritual and ritual
role water plays in many cultures, but glass and water have
long been related in her mind. As a student at Aichi
University of Education, Esaki studied painting and pottery
before she became interested in working with American glass
artist, Michael Rogers. She was drawn to the "softness of
glass. When it's hot, it's melting, flowing. I think it's
like a kind of water when it's melting in a furnace," she
explained.
At CGCA, thick-walled kiln-cast containers--some black and
some clear-- made in the early weeks of her residency contain
real water, its shimmering transparency a foil to that of
glass. The compact form of Esaki's table-top containers is
usually a perfect half sphere, sometimes presented on a
slightly flaring and substantial pedestal. Esaki cast her own
hands in wax which she invested in molds in order to cast
clear glass hands which can be placed nearby, as if cupping
the containers. The disembodied glass hands project an
archetypal cleanliness and purity echoing the symbolism of
water itself.
By the time Esaki had completed her residency, she was
casting "containers" filled with glass-- completely solid.
She polishes the "water" surface, making the illusion of
water so effective that a visitor finds it necessary to touch
it to test its solidity. One such basin is silvered on the
outside, clear on the inside. Another "crescent" basin is
cupped by casts of Esaki's hands. The glass has been allowed
to devitrify, giving these marble-like hands a pale,
incorporeal appearance.
To the complex interface of meaning and appearance linking
glass and water Esaki adds an interest in lenses. The effects
of lenses, such as reversing images, reducing and enlarging
images by altering focal distance can be observed in water
and glass. Esaki used both substances in a series of
installations, many of which involved spheres organized in
metal frames. Mind Box (1998), a free-standing
vertical metal panel, presents nine spheres filed with water
while in Focal Distance(1999) the water-filled spheres
are arranged in smaller boxes. Trembling Dots(1999),
made for Esaki's first solo exhibition, is a herd of dimpled
spheres placed on top of a lighted fine-mesh grid so that the
black mesh appears to squirm like psychedelic moire patterns
over the surface of the glass.
Aside from black and occasionally blue, she has little
interest in colored glass, although she uses metallic and
matte surfaces to contrast with transparency. "Water adapts
to any space. It has no color," Esaki says admiringly.
"Anywhere you put the piece, the piece adapts."
In a functional sideline, Esaki makes black bowls and small
sake cups is each embellished inside with a fragile silver
star/asterisk shape. The effect is slightly reminiscent of
the white star-bursts found in snowflake obsidian. She says
these simple elegant pieces are "for joy," recreation away
from more demanding conceptual work. Shimmering at the bottom
of a transparent cup of sake, the little foil stars suggest
the same delight in simple forms and visual phenomena as the
more ambitious chozubachi. But as Esaki's work with lenses
suggests, clarity is not as simple as it appears. Glass and
water can be equally illusory.
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Last modified
01:42 PM 03/04/2008