Bio and images
“I sometimes like a little
ambiguity in my work and a certain amount of symmetry,” says Mayumi Miyake, a
winter, 2005 Resident Fellow at the Creative Glass Center of America. She began working with glass about five years
ago and, after completing four years of study at the Toyama Institute of Glass
Art in Japan, decided she wanted to study abroad. Since then she has been to
Pilchuck three times and now is at Wheaton Village.
Compared to mediums like clay, wood, and brush and
ink, glass is a relatively new medium of art-making in Japan; however, Miyake
has said that she believes glass is especially suited to the expression of a
quality prized in Japanese culture. She identifies it as “vagueness” or “the
borderline between yes and no, the boundary between light and shade.” Glass as
a material communicates ambiguity and ineffable subtleties of emotion.
Perhaps because she has decided to pursue her studies
in a foreign country, Miyake is especially aware that she possesses a Japanese
aesthetic and sensibility. On the other hand, as an international artist, she
acknowledges her work as the expression of individuality and uniqueness. It
grows, she says, from the perceptions of the “eye of the mind.”
Glass, even transparent polished glass, reflects the
image of its maker and its viewer. Miyake is fascinated with this effect, in
which we recognize ourselves and others through an interpretive or mirroring
medium. She speaks of “knowing others through reflection and knowing others by
looking back.” Miyake is not familiar with the work of the French psychoanalyst
Jacques Lacan, but her concept is surprisingly consistent with Lacan’s
discussion of the “Mirror Stage” in which the infant forms a sense of self.
Perhaps encouraged by its mother, the infant sees itself for the first time as
a whole and discrete entity by looking in a mirror. In the mirror, one achieves
self-consciousness.
Lacan, however, describes the seemingly whole “self”
in the mirror as false. It is not the self at all but a reflection, as the
child will soon realize to its confusion and even dismay. The mirror image can
never be joined with the self, creating in Lacan’s terms a situation of
perpetual fragmentation and unsatisfied desire. For Lacan that vision is the
recognition of an “other” from whom we will forever be divided by a cold
barrier of glass.
Miyake
(literally) casts this story in a non-psychoanalytic context, but I think Lacan
would appreciate her representation of the persistent ambiguity of self-hood
constructed through mirroring sculptures which embody geometric clarity and
fragmentation. Mirror (2004), a transparent disc-like form, for example,
is studded with regular circular polished protrusions. They are optically
ambiguous; Depending on the angle of the light, they may reflect something or
be transparent. Perhaps fragments of the self are reflected or perhaps many
selves own a part of the surface. Light may simply glance off. Because of the
form’s transparency, bumps can read as holes. Such a potentiated diversity of
meaning is typical of post-structuralism thinking. Just as the self is defined
by not being the other; light, often the subject of Miyake’s work, can
only be perceived because of its potential absence. “There is dark so we can
see light,” she notes.
Miyake is primarily a kiln caster and likes refined
almost minimal forms. Because she values severe simplicity so highly, it is
fortunate that she is one of the very rare artists who truly enjoys
cold-working glass. She says she “loves” the intense concentration of shaping a
piece on eclectically-powered grinding wheels.
She is also unusual in inventing a detail-oriented
process involving paper collage. Dense almost monolithic transparent cast forms
are faced with a layer of glued-on paper, sometimes rice paper which contained
writing— even a letter or printed
newspaper torn into irregular fragments so minute that attempting to decipher
words is futile. Some of the pieces Miyake collages are unsent letters or cards
(An unsent postcard was the first such source). This soft, fragmented layer is
generally viewed through the mass of glass where it functions as a translucent
veil admitting light and emphasizing the distance between transparent planes.
The soft colors soaked into the paper infuse the
crystalline glass. Some of the paper collages are based on the white strips of
paper inscribed with prayers which the Japanese tie to trees at Buddhist
temples. Miyake has copied some of the words from these, as well as mandalas. A
serious earthquake in Tibet inspired such an altruistic wish embodied in Mirror
of Mind: Hope, in which a collage suggests a landscape.
These pieces are universal and particular. While the
physical mass of each of these works references “time and the body;” planes of
collaged paper are “more about the moment and words.” Whatever fragmented text
is visible in the final piece is illegible, identifiable only abstractly as the
gesture of communication.
Once again, Miyake expresses a post-structuralist
sensibility in distinguishing between the idea of communication and
specific messages which might be communicated. When a visitor comments, “You
like to work hard.” Miyake smiles: “Yes.” She pauses thoughtfully and nods.
“Training.”
Created by
lluttrell
Last modified
03:15 PM 03/04/2008