Look to Nature: Toshiko Takaezu

Image courtesy of Toshiko Takaezu Foundation.

Drawn from ASU Art Museum's permanent collection, “Look to Nature” presents the work of internationally-known artist Toshiko Takaezu. Growing up in Hawaii infused a deep sense of nature in her that never left. Takaezu worked actively in clay, fiber and bronze for more than six decades using a combination of Eastern and Western techniques and aesthetics. In the late 1950s, she developed her signature style of closed-form vessels, containers that held air and space. They conveyed a sense of tranquility from the simplicity of the forms and subtle brush decoration. Takaezu started working in bronze toward the end of her career and created a series of bells, which explore the relationship between sculpture and sound.

The ASU Art Museum will reopen to the public, Thursday, Aug. 20, 2020. During our temporary hiatus we have been thinking about you and working diligently to plan for your safe return to the museum. To ensure the well-being of all our visitors and staff, we ask that you please comply with our new ASU and city guidelines to keep all of us safe. Reserve your free timed-entry tickets and learn more about our new guidelines before visiting.

“Look to Nature: Toshiko Takaezu” is supported by the Windgate Charitable Foundation as part of the Windgate Contemporary Craft Initiative and Peter Russo.

An initiative presented in association with the Feminist Art Coalition (FAC). 

Image courtesy of Toshiko Takaezu Foundation.

ASU Art Museum
480-965-2787
https://asuartmuseum.asu.edu/
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ASU Art Museum Ceramics Research Center