FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Premier Ceramist's Work Joins the Crocker, Featured in Special Exhibit
Echoes of the Earth:
Ceramics by Toshiko Takaezu
May 20- August 19, 2007
March 20, 2007 – Sacramento, Calif. – Opening May 18 at the Crocker Art Museum, Echoes of the Earth: Ceramics by Toshiko Takaezu showcases the art of America's greatest living female ceramic artist. Featuring more than 50 of her signature “pots,” as Takaezu refers to them, the show highlights a gift from the artist to the Crocker’s permanent collection.
“The Crocker is proud to be the recipient of 32 works by Toshiko Takaezu,” said Lial Jones, Museum Director. “This gift represents a complete survey of this significant artist’s work joining the Museum’s ever-growing collection of international ceramics.”
Takaezu’s signature closed-mouth forms push the limits of the clay vessel beyond the realm of utility. No longer able to contain, her forms lose their utilitarian meaning and communicate as pure art. Her pieces boast diverse and exquisite finishes that include vibrant matte glazes on porcelain in addition to more subdued smoke effects on stoneware in the Japanese anagama tradition. She finds inspiration in nature and geology, both being ageless and ancient, yet her works are distinctly modern. The forms and their surfaces are visceral, like abstract expressionist paintings. Their impact is almost primordial.
The close relationship of Takaezu’s forms to those of nature is paramount, and the artist’s Buddhist upbringing and Zen training pervade her art and life with ideals of restraint, interconnectedness and continuity. Takaezu says it best: "In my life I see no difference between making pots, cooking and growing vegetables. They are all so related. However, there is a need for me to work in clay. It is so gratifying and I get so much joy from it, and it gives me many answers in my life.”
The Crocker Art Museum was founded in 1885 and continues as the leading art institution for the California Capital Region and Central Valley. The Museum offers a diverse spectrum of special exhibitions, events and programs to augment its collections of California, European and Asian artworks. The Crocker is located at 216 O Street in downtown Sacramento. Museum hours are 10 AM–5 PM, Tuesday–Sunday; Thursday until 9 PM. For more information on exhibits and events call (916) 264-5423 or visit crockerartmuseum.org.
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Media Contact: LeAnne R. Ruzzamenti
Media: (916) 264-1963
Mobile : (916) 213-9402
Public: (916) 264-5423
216 O Street
Sacramento, CA 95814
www.crockerartmuseum.org
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2007 Press Releases
11.01.07
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10.12.07
Crocker Receives $325,000 Grant from Irvine Foundation
09.25.07
Mid-Century Meets Modern at the 47th Annual Crocker Ball on December 1
09.25.07
Crocker Holiday Art & Craft Festival November 23-25 Moves to New Location at Scottish Rite Center
09.25.07
36th Annual Antiques Show & Sale October 26-28
09.25.07
Neo-Crocker: A Modern Culture Party Celebrates Crocker Past, Future
09.04.07
Crocker's Mobile Museum
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Crocker Art Book Fair September 8
07.26.07
Crocker Art Museum Breaks Ground on 125,000 Square-Foot Expansion
06.25.07
America’s Most Celebrated Folk Artist Comes to the Crocker
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Rediscover a Sacramento Treasure
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Lead Donors to Crocker Expansion Project Announced
05.03.07
Find Love Fast at the Crocker
05.01.07
New Grant Brings Crocker's Education Programs to San Joaquin, Solano & Yolo Counties
03.20.07
Premier Ceramist's Work Joins the Crocker, Featured in Special Exhibit
03.20.07
New Works in Crocker Collection Examine Human Form and Its Condition
02.14.07
Rocklin Residents Enjoy Ansel Adams Photographs for Free
on April 22
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