Wednesday, November 4, 2020

Artist of the Day, November 4, 2020: Ruth Asawa, an American sculptor (#1137)

 Ruth Aiko Asawa (1926 – 2013) was one of California’s most renowned sculptors. Born to Japanese immigrants, in 1942, her family was sent to an internment camp for six months; while there, she spent time drawing and painting with other artists. Asawa traveled to Mexico City in 1945 to study Spanish and Mexican Art. While attending the Milwaukee State Teachers College in Wisconsin, she was told that she couldn’t complete her degree because of the prejudice that existed against the Japanese people at the time. As a result, Asawa continued her education at the Black Mountain College in North Carolina. While there, she studied under Josef Albers, Merce Cunningham, and Buckminster Fuller.

In 1947, Asawa returned to Mexico and learned basket weaving techniques, which later inspired her to create crocheted wire sculptures. During the 1950s, Asawa began her art career making paintings and drawings that developed into linear works. Inevitably, her drawings shifted into sculpture. Asawa considers her wire sculptures to be three-dimensional drawings that change with the viewer’s perspective.

In 1966, the artist began to receive commissions for public art, starting with Andrea, a fountain in Ghirardelli Square in San Francisco. She also designed the Japanese-American Internment Memorial Sculpture in San Jose in 1994. Asawa collaborated with landscape artists in 2002 to bring large boulders from former Japanese internment camps to San Francisco State University to create the Garden of Remembrance. Her belief in making art education available to children from all backgrounds lead her to co-found the Alvarado Arts Workshop (now called the San Francisco Arts Education Project) with Sally Woodbridge and other local parents in 1965. Asawa’s sculptures can be found in the collections of the M.H. de Young Memorial Museum in San Francisco, the Guggenheim Museum and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, and the Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art in Logan, Utah.

Asawa was an arts education advocate and the driving force behind the creation of the San Francisco School of the Arts, which was renamed the Ruth Asawa San Francisco School of the Arts in 2010 in tribute to her.


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Ms. Ruth Asawa

1954, Untitled (S.027) Detail

1954, Untitled (S.272)

1954-58, Untitled (S270)

1955, Untitled (S.042)

1956, Untitled (S.040)

1958, Untitled (S.089)

1958, Untitled (S.114)

1959, Untitled (S.039)

1962 Untitled (S.049)

1962, Untitled (S.058)

1962, Untitled (S.089)

1962, Untitled (S.177)

1963, Untitled (S.006)

1963, Untitled (S.022)

1963, Untitled (S.023)

1963, Untitled (S.122)

1963, Untitled (S.131)

1964, Untitled (S.220)

1964, Untitled (S.229)

1968, Andrea Ghirardelli-Square, San Francisco

1968, Untitled (S.007)

1968, Untitled (S.145)

1968, Untitled (S.187)

1968, Untitled (S.226)

1968-70, Untitled (S.062)

1969, Growth Bethany Center senior Housing, San Framcisco

1970, Untitled (S.080)

1970, Untitled (S.238)

1972, Untitled (S.124)

1972, Untitled (S.203)

1974, Untitled (S.365)

1975, Untitled (S.115)

1976, Origami fountain, Buchanan Mall

1986, Aurora Bayside Plaza, San Francisco

1988, History of wine, Beringer winery, St. Helena, Ca

1996, Untitled (S.130)

1996, Untitled (S.158)

 Installation Architecture of life

 

2 comments:

  1. Mesmerizing, so organic, yet so powerful, so much like feminine essence. They make you wonder what materials she chose and how she managed to make them conform to her designs, as life often makes us wonder.

    ReplyDelete
  2. beautiful - how can i get added to your posts please?

    ReplyDelete