Page 162 - japanese and korean art Utterberg Collection Christie's March 22 2022
P. 162

Gizan is a contemporary sculptor concerned with the human form
                                          and steeped in the traditional art and culture of Japan. Born in
                                          Tokyo in 1968, he now lives and works in Saitama Prefecture. As
                                          a young man, he was a professional musician, specializing in rock
                                          and jazz guitar. One day, when he was twenty-four-years old, he
                                          visited an exhibition of Buddhist sculpture at a museum. That
                                          changed his life. He spent the next six years learning to carve wood
                                          sculpture—although he was told that he was too old to start—
                                          and then entered on a seven-year apprenticeship with Iwamatsu
                                          Shubun, a sculptor in Saitama, who was in a direct lineage
                                          descending from the famous Meiji-period sculptor Takamura Koun
                                          (1852–1934). Koun strove to promote the traditional art of wood
                                          carving. Like Koun, his idol, Gizan works in a highly realistic style
                                          defined by stunning craftsmanship.
                                          Gizan became an independent artist at the age of thirty-eight,
                                          around 2006, and began showing his work in exhibitions. His early
                                          works featured famous Japanese historical figures. He then turned
                                          to work imbued with a deeper spirituality and humanity, including
                                          Buddhist and Shinto themes. A period of monastic training in
                                          retreat on Mount Hiei furthered his understanding of Buddhism.
                                          Gizan’s process involves working from a plaster model and
                                          optimizing his work using a sculpture point machine that consists
                                          of a kind of crosspiece or frame with three points that measure
                                          precisely the width, depth and height of his model. He finishes a
                                          sculpture with chisels only, never sanding down the surface and
                                          never coating the surface with paint or lacquer. Even the iron
                                          staples, or clamps, that hold the individual pieces of wood together
                                          are left exposed—here just above the biceps, for example.
                                          The figure shown here manifests a primordial act of prayer, an
                                          instinct the artist believes to be essential to our humanity.
                                          Gizan is currently working on a commission for Ninna-ji Temple
                                          in Kyoto.
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