Bio and images
“My
reason to paint on glass comes from a simple and child-like wonder: What
if I could paint in the air, and preserve it somehow?”
By placing her
paintings on glass, Atsuko Tajima, a Winter 2007 Resident Fellow at the
Creative Glass Center of America, did find a way to paint in air. As a
consequence her paintings have a spatial presence and protean temporal quality
which transcends the static two dimensions of traditional painting.
Used
as early as the 4th century BCE, reverse painting on glass is valued for the
way it captures light. The technique became more sophisticated in 13th
century Italy
and in the 17th century, metal foil added radiance especially suited
to religious images. In the 18th century, China
exported many reverse glass paintings, mostly of secular subjects, to Europe and in the following century reverse glass
painting became a popular hobby for American women.
None of the long
history of reverse glass painting directly influenced Tajima, who spontaneously
made her first painting on glass at the age of three. However, perhaps the
qualities which made hinterglas (the
German term) painting fascinating to so many generations did. It is a
provocative coincidence that Tajima mentions Wassily Kandinsky’s color and
compositions as influences on her work, even though she was not aware that the
man credited with making the first abstract painting had earlier made hinterglas paintings in emulation of the
glowing colorful icons of his Russian childhood.
There are two
main technical hurdles to painting on glass. The first is adhering the paint —
Tajima uses mostly acrylics — to a hard polished surface. Tajima stabilizes the
surface with acrylic medium. Occasionally she sandblasts to add more tooth. The
second problem is that what in a traditional painting is executed last: the
highlights and surfaces which appear it the visual forefront of the painting,
must be executed first. The painter then works back, eventually into the
background, covering what has been done and, thus, eliminating the option of
altering or correcting it later on.
By using gold
leaf, either in the foreground, or behind a shadowed shape, Tajima injects
light into different levels of her painting. Gold refracts light through the
glass and gives forms life.
Tajima’s
technical innovation in reverse glass painting is slumping the glass sheet into
a relief form which enhances the painting. She makes molds or slumps forms into
shaped sand. The equipment at WheatonArts allowed her to exercise greater
control in manipulating sheets of glass. Utilizing both the dimensional surface
and reflective gold, her paintings appear to move and to change with the
viewer’s movements.
At
WheatonArts, Tajima worked on several series which she planned to exhibit
together in a fifty-foot horizontal band at a show scheduled for the Banana
Factory in May, 2007; however, her over-arching wish is to make work for public
settings like hospitals where it will “give back to the community.”
She says, “My
motivation for making art has changed a lot in the last couple of months.”
She’s recently experienced loss and illness in those near to her and has become
increasingly committed to “art as a tool of healing. It’s not going to heal
immediately but it has some kind of mild way of adjusting our spirit,” She
believes. “As I grow older (she’s 42), I’m more interested in showing work to
community people than gallery people.” She says that she would feel her art is
successful if it could give just one person the will to live.