Bio and images
The work of Ayako Ikeda, a spring
Resident Fellow at the Creative Glass Center of America gives rise to several
paradoxical trains of thought. Ikeda was born in Kumamoto, Japan and much of
her work consists of vases and bowls. It’s a bit of a cliché but also true that
what Westerners tend to speak of as “functional” or “decorative art,” ranking
it below “fine” art, has consistently received more attention and appreciation
in Japan than it does in twentieth century USA. However, when one considers the
passions of collectors here, it’s difficult to be sure how dramatically the
intensity of appreciation in Japan differs from that in the USA.
An
archetypal Japanese example of practical art at the highest level would be
objects associated with the tea ceremony. The best are cultural artifacts
of inestimable philosophical or
spiritual resonance. Cha-no-yu (the way of tea) centers on a ritual in which
participants theoretically abandon the consciousness of status, paradoxically
has always nurtured a fetish for the cult of personality relating to tea
masters and makers of tea utensils. In the face of the Modern design movement,
Yanagi Soetsu’s 1926 book The Unknown Craftsman was the impetus for the
international Modern mingei or folk movement in crafts. The “craftsman” of
Soetsu’s title is “unknown” because he does not seek or expect fame or personal
expression. He exists only through his work. As everyone knows, “mingei”
potters Bernard Leach (British) and his colleague Shoji Hamada sought to affirm
the value of the humble artist working in anonymity; however, inevitably they
and other mingei-type craftsworkers became crafts superstars with readily
indentifiable styles, sought-after as commentators and teachers.
To
return to the present day, Ikeda was drawn to qualities in glass which are
quintessentially the product of authentically anonymous craftsmakers: organic
and accidental. Before turning to art making, she studied design and its
relationship to society and human cultures from an academic perspective at the
University of Shiga Prefecture. As graduate student in the Department of Life
Style Studies, Ikeda became involved in researching a building in Kyoto that
combined a businness with living quarters for the family. She became fascinated
by panes of 200-year-old glass integrated with traditional shoji screens in a
novel way. Each small transparent pane cut from a blown rondel was the center
of a grid, surrounded by eight identically shaped squares of translucent rice
paper, then the traditional covering for an exterior opening. This was Ikeda’s
first close examination of blown glass. She was enchanted. “It’s so flowing,”
she recalls, “The lights and shadows; it’s so beautiful.”
By
the time she finished her Masters degree at the university, she was also
studying glass blowing. Ultimately she completed a course at the Toyama City
Institute of Glass Art. From there she came to Pilchuck where she met her
future husband, Christopher Lydon. Today she lives in Philadelphia
where She and Lydon produce work jointly under the name Glassboss Studios,
Limited Production Company.
Ikeda,
in her personal work, blows vases which are gracefully simple and traditional
in shape; however, she moves beyond the typical in her exacting technical
process. She layers colors over one another, almost mimicing the layering of
lacquer which is later carved, but using greater contrast in color. When the
blown glass has been anealed, Ikeda uses a Dremel grinding tool to carve linear
images through the layers of color. A swelling, teardrop-shaped vase from the
“KIKU” series is a deep peony pink on the outside. The simple outlines of
flowers cut through the translucent pink and an opaque white layer into a dark
base color. The whole transparent rosy
exterior is made pinker by the underlying white.
Ikeda
carves the schematic flowers with a sensibility which reflects her study of old
fabrics and wallpapers. She collects textiles, often old kimonos, and sews her
own clothes incorporating pieces of antique material. The flower design is a
transcription, contemporarily “cute” and simultaneously suggestive of the
Japanese woodcut tradition.
In
a final step, Ikeda re-heats the vessel to smooth the edges. In the “KIKU” design, stylized chrysanthmums,
an autumn flower, mingle with spring flowering cherry blossoms in a way which
might be surprising in old Japan where designs often relate to particular
seasons. Though they suggest nature, nature in its irregularity doesn’t appear
to be the real subject of Ikeda’s vases; decoration does. For her, it’s flowers
for flowers’ sake. The regular and outline-oriented character of these blossoms
hints at the manga sensibility of much contemporary Japanese art and at the
current Western fashion for Japanese-inspired printed fabrics.
Ikeda’s
fabric studies perhaps suggested the “Bamboo Series” in which opaque sections
of pâte de verre incised with a bamboo motif are inserted into a
transparent blown vessel in greenish yellow. She’s also used similar panels
patterned with flowers and made bowls in which the incised lines become
transparently suggestive of rippling water.
The particular project she planned for her
CGCA residency visually suggests fabric piecing or patching and builds on her pâte
de verre skills. She plans to apply sections of the sugary pate de verre to a blown vessel and
overlay it with hot glass. Later, she will carve into the cooled glass to
reveal the interior color pattern.
Anonymity aside, Ikeda’s discipline and sense
of purpose do seem to resonante with the powerful Japanese tradition, which
values skills honed through many repetitions.
The sense of pattern and process and sensitivity to materials are
qualities artists everywhere must admire.
Created by
lluttrell
Last modified
01:56 PM 03/04/2008