The Nikko Transfer Series ceramic sculpture installations
stem primarily from a visit I made in 1986 to Nikko National
Park, located outside Tokyo, Japan. During my visit to Nikko,
I was overwhelmed by one shrine in particular, the Nikko Toshogu
Shrine. Its exquisite architectural beauty, typical of the
Japanese Edo period, emanates from temples that are a fantasy
of brilliant hues of orange, green, blue, black and red, lacquered
wood with applications of gold leaf to protect the beautiful
carvings from the wind and rain. The visual opulence and color
sensations that I experienced during that visit have remained
with me.
This sculpture is built by hand using a low-fire, white clay
body. The geometric austerity of the shape is relieved with
colors reminiscent of Nikko Shrine itself. The exterior decoration
of my architectonic sculptural form is executed in pure colors
like those of the shrine. The interior of this piece is embellished
with an opulent 14-carat gold luster, fired at C/019 over
a previously fired C/04 transparent glaze. The installation
of the sculpture inside a Plexiglas case, with its bilateral
symmetry and decorated underside reflected in a mirror, embodies
and enhances the transfer concept, as it exudes a quiet tranquility.
The Nikko Transfer Series: Nikko Transformed sculpture
is a material metaphor that provides a tangible manifestation
of my Nikko experience.