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Kitamura Junko
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Kitamura Junko : ウィキペディア英語版
Kitamura Junko

Kitamura Junko is a Japanese ceramic artist. Born in 1956, her artwork resides in the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, The Brooklyn Museum, the British Museum, the Museum of Fine Art, Boston, and the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian. She has won prizes for her work from the Siga Prefecture Art Exhibition in 1983, the Kyoto Art and Crafts Exhibition in 1984 and 1985, and the World Triennial Exhibition of Small Ceramics in Zagreb, Coratia in 1997. Kitamura completed her MFA at the Kyoto City University of Art. She is married to artist Yo Akiyama, and was the student of two prominent Japanese artists: Suzuki Osamu and Kondo Yutaka.
== Work and Inspiration ==

Kitamura’s ceramic works are made of stonewear and white slip, often decorated with intricate, dizzying patterns. The wheel-thrown pieces are sometimes adorned with white dots, which create a shifting pattern against the background, heighted by their subtle texture. Although the tiny decorations appears obsessive, Kitamura’s work is inspired by the ancient 15th century Korean tradition of buncheong ware of slip-inlay. Her designs are punched into the surface by hand with bamboo, the inlaid with a white slip. Punch’ong, or otherwise known as buncheong ware could be either inlaid or stamped to create well defined patterns, or incised for a more freehand, inventive style. The buncheong tradition was interrupted by the Japanese invasions of Korea in 1592, and 1598, but was resumed in the seventeenth century by Korean and Japanese potters. Kitamura’s work also appears to reference or evoke pottery designs from the Jomon Period (10,500-300 BC).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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