'Grey Flower' Sculpture by Chinoko Sakamoto
£500.00
“I am interested in creating forms that invoke memory. The rawness resembles the memory invoked from looking at my old photographs, with details lost but fondness and familiarity remained. The inspirations that prompted this work are recollections of mundane objects – pebbles, glass, the way buildings looked from a distance, walls of housing or fences. I study their structure, proportion and system to recreate them, imbuing them with stillness and yet an undeniable presence.”
– Chinoko Sakamoto
By Japanese Sculptor Chinoko Sakamoto
Materials: Stoneware with underglaze and stain
Dimensions: H;18cm, W;-cm
Techniques: Each sculpture is unique, combining hand-building techniques and a distinctive blend of slips and glazes.
Care: A gentle wash with warm water
“I am interested in creating forms that invoke memory. The rawness resembles the memory invoked from looking at my old photographs, with details lost but fondness and familiarity remained. The inspirations that prompted this work are recollections of mundane objects – pebbles, glass, the way buildings looked from a distance, walls of housing or fences. I study their structure, proportion and system to recreate them, imbuing them with stillness and yet an undeniable presence.”
– Chinoko Sakamoto
By Japanese Sculptor Chinoko Sakamoto
Materials: Stoneware with underglaze and stain
Dimensions: H;18cm, W;-cm
Techniques: Each sculpture is unique, combining hand-building techniques and a distinctive blend of slips and glazes.
Care: A gentle wash with warm water
“I am interested in creating forms that invoke memory. The rawness resembles the memory invoked from looking at my old photographs, with details lost but fondness and familiarity remained. The inspirations that prompted this work are recollections of mundane objects – pebbles, glass, the way buildings looked from a distance, walls of housing or fences. I study their structure, proportion and system to recreate them, imbuing them with stillness and yet an undeniable presence.”
– Chinoko Sakamoto