"Hammer, Chisel, Drill: Noguchi's Studio Practice" Exhibition

The Noguchi Museum

poster for "Hammer, Chisel, Drill: Noguchi's Studio Practice" Exhibition

This event has ended.

The exhibition will illuminate Noguchi's practice in six of the studios he used during the course of his career. These were located in Manhattan and Queens, New York; Querceta and Pietrasanta, Italy; and Kanagawa prefecture and Mure, Japan. Hammer, Chisel, Drill will also briefly consider Noguchi's time as an assistant in the Paris studio of Constantin Brancusi, which was critical not only as the younger artist's first exposure to direct stone-carving, but also for its influence on the way he would set up his own studios.

Hammer, Chisel, Drill: Noguchi's Studio Practice will include about sixty hand- and industrial tools drawn from Noguchi's belongings. A handful of his sculptures, finished and unfinished, will be positioned throughout the exhibition as they relate to specific tools or processes, and a 1970 documentary including footage of Noguchi at work at his Pietrasanta studio will run. Elsewhere in the Museum, footage of contemporary artists at work in their studios will be screened, illustrating the combination of craft and consideration inherent to the art-making process.

The exhibition will also feature a variety of photographs documenting the artist at work in the six studios: during the 1940s in MacDougal Alley, where he experimented with slate; in the 1950s in the Kita Kamakura studio, in Kanagawa prefecture, Japan, the source of most of his ceramic work; in the 10th Street studio, in Long Island City, which was his New York headquarters from 1961 onward; during the 1960s in the Pietrasanta and Querceta studios, where he rekindled his appreciation for direct stone-carving at quarries used by Michelangelo; and in the studio at Mure, Japan, where he worked with stone for half of every year from 1969 until the end of his life, in 1988.

Media

Schedule

from October 03, 2012 to May 12, 2013

Artist(s)

Isamu Noguchi

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