Bio and images
Hiroki Niimi brought a stack of photographs of traditional
Japanese tools to his Spring, 2001 residency at the Creative
Glass Center of America: shovels, hoes, baskets, ladles, and
traps. He based most of his sculpture directly on these
handmade tools which are no longer used in today's world.
Nevertheless, Niimi finds that the once functional forms
remain beautiful and full of meaning. This interest partly
grew out of his father's interest in antique tools, but also
Niimi wants to know his roots. "Each tool comes from a place
in the [Japanese] culture," he says. He feels that objects
which may well have served generations of workers and
craftspeople are inscribed with the touch of many hands and
time itself.
Niimi's aesthetic is based on the Japanese idea of
sabi, a sense of value which is found in objects and
materials which are old and weathered like rusted iron and
worn wood. Sabi embodies a sense of the past -- of the
action of time and nature. An old shed which is falling down
may have the beauty of sabi. Sabi often embodies a sense of
use. Perhaps the usefulness of a broken tool has been
literally used up but it has been a partner in someone's
work, it is a record of human activity.
Because of his aesthetic, Niimi rejects brilliantly colored
and clear glass, preferring dark blue or black or white
glass. Although he thinks clear glass is "very beautiful,"
its transparency tends to disolve the form. He casts glass
and occasionally uses blown glass shapes but, even then,
generally sand-blasts it or otherwise alters the surface. He
says, "Shiny texture has no history; I feel the texture of
history in sand casting and kiln casting."
His most ambitious works at CGCA were large (60 lb)
sculptures based on fish traps. The subject matter and simple
useful forms present clear links to the Arte Povera of Italo
Scanga and the more minimal work of Martin Puryear inspired
by traditional African crafts. Niimi made the models for the
fish trap sculptures from styrofoam. After investing the
styrofoam in a plaster mold, he laborously scraped it out to
prevent dangerous fumes of burnout during casting. The
largest fish traps in blue-black are open conical shapes. The
originals in wood or bamboo were designed to lure fish
through a funnel-like opening into a space so angled that
larger fish are unable to swim out. Openings between the
slats of the trap allow small fish to escape and also keep
the trap light enough for the fisherman to raise it. The
glass trap, of course, is much heavier. Its slight
translucence hints at the sculpture's relationship to water.
Some lighter weight fish trap sculptures are equally
ambitious in scale but much more fragile. These were built up
from thin strips of cane, some glued together and some fused.
White and clear glass edge the blue like an icy rime in a
more varied but still essentially monochrome pattern. The
obviously brittle, immensely fragile glass structure which
perfectly mimics a resiliant basket-like bamboo trap
underlines the fate of the old tools: the fact that after
generations of usefulness they have become obsolete.
Observing Niimi's interest in fish traps and related objects,
Joe Mattson, a senior glass artist in the factory at Wheaton
Village, invited him to go fishing off the coast of New
Jersey where Niimi caught unusual fish: a skate and a small
shark. One of Niimi's most satisfying fishing-inspired works
takes the form of a large fishing weight or sinker perhaps 8"
in diameter. The slate-colored oval of glass is neatly bound
at its widest circumference with wheat-colored hemp rope,
prickly and glossy in contrast to the matte smooth surface of
the glass. It was blown in two halves and then the
indentation for the rope ground down.
Similarly, Niimi produced pairs of tack-shaped forms, each
seven or eight inches high, to be assembled into another very
accurate full-scale duplication of a traditional tool. The
circular tack tops will be glued together and the points of
the tack shapes will become the rollable handles of grinders.
The originals were designed to roll along a narrow trough and
crush grain.
The texture of wood is preserved in Bark, a
green-tinted somewhat irregular cast glass monolith. Ovals of
devitrified glass are placed inside a framework of wood and
metal in individual sculptures dedicated to Ancient
Times and Time. In these works, Niimi asks glass
to represent something elemental and again connected to the
idea of sabi.
Niimi often works in an installation context. A six-foot long
row of 35 slump-altered glass sheets stands upright as if the
devitrified undualting, paper-like sheet squares were
supported by a pile of white rice husks. In actuality each is
held in position by a concealed iron framework. Again,
incorporating homely rural products--rice husks which are
traditionally used as fertilizer-- in an almost Arte Povera
manner, Niimi celebrates a vanishing way of life, but, more
profoundly, the inevitable, unending process of time itself.
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Last modified
03:21 PM 03/04/2008