Works of KANAZAWA Kenichi

updated: july 5, 2011

CAREER AND WORKS

AMABIKI 2011 / KANAZAWA Kenichi

ONIMUSHI's dreams
ONIMUSHI's dreams
Steel
[90-120]x[90-120]x[50-60](h)cm x6pieces
There was a women working on turning over the soil. Asked what she was doing she said "ONIMUSHI".
"ONIMUSHI?" Peeping into a bucket standing nearby, I saw a pile of the pale, translucent larvae of stag beetles.
I was shocked for a moment. It was an erotic image, like the genitals of adolescent boys.
Places where fallen leaves pile up are, for these larvae, like a warm and comfortable bed.
That incident provided the motif for my current piece of work.
"O-NI MU-SHI" sounds like "the devil bugs".

AMABIKI 2008 / KANAZAWA Kenichi

Formation of movement
Formation of movement
Steel
1,800×20×20 (h)cm
I am thinking of a shape created from steel, standing in the woods, its form following the ground surface, contrasting with the shapes and verticality of the trees.
Cutting grooves into square steel pipes creates organic curves from the inorganic linearity of that industrial product.
I will put that curve up against a single wild cherry tree and see what presence the iron exerts in the woods.

AMABIKI 2006 / KANAZAWA Kenichi

Fragments_of_Sound-At_an_Unmanned_Station
Fragments of Sound-At an Unmanned Station
Steel, Rubber, Urethane foam, Nut
186(φ)×71.5 (h)cm /Table
47.1×45×85 (h)cm ×4pieces /Chair
There was nobody in the waiting room of the bleak, unmanned station building. While I waited for the train, I heard only the echo of my breath and footsteps. I wanted something that would imply human presence while serving the purpose of the waiting room. That became a table and chairs that make sounds, which would hold communication between the people who gather in the waiting room.

THE FIFTH AMABIKI VILLAGE AND SCULPTURE / KANAZAWA Kenichi

3_(or_like_a_small_tree-house)
3 (or like a small tree-house)
15-20×15-30×10(h)cm (×60P)
0.47kg (1P)
Aluminum, Stainless steel
Leaving the path through the rice fields and moving into the copse, a strange feeling came over me that it would go on forever. Surrounded by trees, as if I had seen something frightening, part of me wanted to go deeper into the heart of the forest. I placed 60 pieces, all variations on a form comprising three square aluminum pipes, dotted among the trees. To move around the forest, in a dialog with its trees. They became rather like little houses atop the trees.

THE FOURTH AMABIKI VILLAGE AND SCULPTURE / KANAZAWA Kenichi

Relation_Between_Bamboo_and_Iron
Relation Between Bamboo and Iron
12.5-31.25×25-37.5×250 cm (×9P)
90 kg (×9P)
Steel
I still remember the amazement I felt one afternoon in the summer of last year when I discovered this deep bamboo grove. I wander through the bamboo grove, and from time to time, I just stop for a while, amid the solemn air and the light that pours down from above. I will erect nine pillar forms in this grove, each consisting of three rectangular steel sections. That resembles the motions of placing my own body among the bamboo. In the time and space of wandering through the grove, the will of the steel, which is the form and material I shaped, slips in and out of view.

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