Bio and images
"Americans tend to say 'yes' or 'no.' Japanese tend to say
'okay' even if they don't want to do it," observes Miho Ogai,
a Spring 2003 Resident Fellow at the Creative Glass Center of
America. "Like me; I've been here for seven years and I can't
really decide. It seems like one foot is in Japan and the
other is in America."
Ogai originally came to the U.S., to Ohio State University,
to study business, but soon switched to art. Though, she has
continued to work here with annual trips home to suburban
Tokyo, she has not abandoned her Japanese-ness. She finds
inspiration in traditional Japanese things like yukata
(casual sashed cotton robes), and fireworks and the homely
crafts of sewing and knitting she learned from her
grandmother. The mysteries of the English language and
Romanized orthography are an on-going exploration. "Language
is hard, even though I've been here for seven years, I still
don't understand a lot of the vocabulary. If I want to
explain the beauty of glass: there are so many [English]
words to describe it, but nuance is missing!"
Ogai's work is personal and subtle. It demands a close
reading which matches the discipline the artist puts into
making it. At CGCA, she made both cast and blown pieces, all
in transparent glass -- she finds colored glass
unsatisfactorily "toy-like." She sand-cast 26 fist-size
cylinders with steps spiraling up the sides. The center of
each is hollow to allow them to be stacked vertically and
held in place by a rod. When the sequence is completed and
assembled as a column, it will approximate Ogai's height,
with one cylinder representing each year of her life. The
spiraling steps circle the center again and again, suggesting
the artist's never-ending search for a singular direction and
the cyclic nature of growth itself.
The subject of a large almost spherical blown vessel, perhaps
10 inches in diameter, is also autobiographical: How I
grew up. . . . The interior of the clear vessel is
crisscrossed three-dimensionally with two precise grids of
black and white elastic threads. "I play with the space
inside to try to describe feelings and experience." Ogai
explains the symbolism, "My parents are very strict.
Everything must be in order. It must be two or one; it can't
be 2.1. My life [in Japan] is kind of like a grid. It's kind
of like a jail. Here people are very different. Sometimes I
want to break loose."
Me vs. Myself is the title of an earlier
sphere-enclosed work involving suspended wafers of dark and
light glass containging writing. In How I Grew Up. . .
black and white threads represent alternate values or
possibilities. The points of intersection might be moments of
decision when one must choose one path another. The white
lines, for Ogai, are related to "purity, heaven and good
things." Black is related to "death, evil and bad things."
Ironically, one must recognize that completing such an
obsessive and relatively small work is demanding, even
oppressive. Yet, it is beautiful, presenting ever-changing
relationships to the eye.
At CGCA, Ogai investigated the possibility of a future work
incorporating descriptive words. She formed English script
from steel wire which she will later combine with glass:
"sensitive; knowledge; talent; strength; impatient; ability;
kindness; brave." The lower case letters are executed in
perfect school-girl cursive writing, like small black neon
signs, with generous opening and closing strokes. "Positive"
is repeated several times. Part of a vocabulary for
describing personalities, the over-arching topic is
error: the fallacy of judging people by what they seem
to be. "I may judge people from their appearance, but as I
get to know them, they are so different from the first
judgment," Ogai muses. "They are kind, for example, but also
a little bit weak." Her original plan was to place the words
behind cloudy lenses, but she is still considering options.
As the grid-filled vessel and spiral staircase suggest, Ogai
is at a decisive point in her career. Her choices are not
between good and evil but, less clearly defined, relating to
cultural bonds and affinities and to ways of using her chosen
medium. She can successfully transcribe her complex inner
life and the mysteries of language in glass sculpture of
broad resonance. She possesses skills and insights which will
facilitate her achievements at the next level of the spiral
upwards.
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Last modified
03:25 PM 03/04/2008