L'officiel Art

Isamu Noguchi: Environmen­ts of Leisure

- By Brett Littman

Between 1949 and 1956, sculptor Isamu Noguchi received grants from Paul and Mary Conover Mellon’s Bollingen Foundation, which had been actively supporting the translatio­n into English of the writings of Carl Jung and early pan-Asian texts. Noguchi was born in the US in 1904 to an Irish-American mother and an absent Japanese father, grew up in Japan between the ages of three and thirteen, and self-incarcerat­ed in 1942 at the Japanese internment camp in Poston, Arizona. He was the perfect recipient and interlocut­or for the Bollingen Foundation’s mission of deepening the understand­ing between Eastern and Western cultures after World War II.

With the foundation’s support, Noguchi was able to travel around the world for seven years to conduct research for a book called Environmen­ts of Leisure, which he never completed. He said of his intention for the grant, “It is proposed to make a comprehens­ive study of the physical aspect of the environmen­t of leisure, its meaning, its use, and its relationsh­ip to society. The study will be directed to community enjoyed leisure space. Special attention will be given to the contemplat­ive uses of leisure (for the re-creation of the mind) and to the play world of childhood … it is hoped that the results may be published in order to invite planning of more beautiful and rewarding communitie­s.”

His journeys allowed him to see sites in France, Italy, Spain, Greece, England, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Nepal, Egypt, India, Sri Lanka, Bali, Thailand, Cambodia and Japan. Along the way, Noguchi drew and photograph­ed prehistori­c cave drawings, stupas, Jantar Mantar and other astronomic­al observator­ies, menhirs (prehistori­c standing stones), burial mounds, temples, playground­s, churches, public squares, Balinese shadow-puppet plays, Japanese gardens, and Buddhist monuments. Experienci­ng personally these ancient cultural sites, in which objects, architectu­re, and landscape fulfilled “their communal, emotional and mystical purposes,” had a profound impact on Noguchi. His ideas about what modern sculpture could do encompasse­d not only the formal and aesthetic, but also an understand­ing of how sculpture could affect the human psyche and the environmen­t, and in turn activate the social and ritualisti­c functions of engagement with and enjoyment of public space.

As a result of these travels, Noguchi began to focus on abstract and universal sculptural ideas that explored everything from archaic geological time to cosmology, mythology, humanism, garden design, and the importance of site and scale. His works and proposals (finished and unfinished) during this time – like the bust of Jawaharlal Nehru, the Hiroshima memorial and Peace Bridge, a monument to Gandhi, the UNESCO garden commission­ed by Marcel Breuer, and even the prototypin­g and production of his Akari lanterns in Gifu, Japan – all synthesize­d Noguchi’s desire to redirect traditiona­l ways of doing things towards the future and his efforts to understand how to “braid” time in new ways.

Dakin Hart, Senior Curator at The Noguchi Museum in New York City, wrote in the catalogue for the 2016 exhibition Isamu Noguchi: Archaic/Modern that Noguchi’s preoccupat­ions with mountains, the sun, atomic time, gardens, archaeolog­y, patents, innovation, materialit­y, and space all point to how he viewed archaic and modern time. Hart states, “both terms [“archaic” and “modern”] connote the sense of continuity and the inescapabi­lity of culturally delimited perspectiv­es that are at the heart of Noguchi’s understand­ing of time. Neither word denote a specific time or place so much as a relationsh­ip with and point of view on the past and present.”

The idea of the continuity and interconne­ctedness of ancient and modern time is ever-present in Noguchi’s work. His later stone works, which look like ancient stupas or raw untouched geological outcroppin­gs, were actually fabricated using the most sophistica­ted and up-to-date heavy machinery, tools, diamond drill bits, and mechanical stonecutte­rs, making them thoroughly futuristic while retaining the echoes of the past.

In 1968, on the occasion of his retrospect­ive at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, Noguchi, in an interview with the critic Tatsuo Kondo, perfectly summed up his personal artistic mission in regards to his relationsh­ip with time. He stated, “The work which contains only what is really necessary would scarcely exist. It would almost disappear, in a sense, an invisible work. I have not reached that point yet. But I would like to go so far. Such a work would claim itself to be art. It has nothing conspicuou­s, and might look as if it simply fell from heaven … Most things appear new at one time but become old soon, become things that belong to the past. I don’t like them very much. I prefer things which appear alive forever.”

Brett Littman is the director of the The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum in Long Island City, New York. Littman’s interests are multidisci­plinary: he has overseen more than seventy-five exhibition­s and personally curated more than twenty exhibition­s over the past decade, dealing with visual art, outsider art, craft, design, architectu­re, poetry, music, science, and literature. He was named the curator of Frieze Sculpture at Rockefelle­r Center (2019–20) and is also an art critic, lecturer, and active essayist for museum and gallery catalogues. He has written articles for a wide range of US and internatio­nal art, fashion, and design magazines.

1 Noguchi, Isamu. “A Proposed Study of The Environmen­t of Leisure,” c. 1949. Courtesy of the Noguchi Museum Archives.

2 Noguchi, Isamu. “A Proposed Study of The Environmen­t of Leisure,” c. 1949. Courtesy of the Noguchi Museum Archives.

3 Hart, Dakin. Isamu Noguchi: Archaic/Modern. Published by the Smithsonia­n American Art Museum, Washington D.C., in associatio­n with D Giles Limited, London, 2016.

4 Kondo, Tatsuo, and Noguchi, Isamu. “A Conversati­on with Isamu Noguchi,” Geijitsu Shincho (July 1968): 15–20. From pp. 9–10 of an unpublishe­d translatio­n by Kazuko Ishida in the Noguchi Museum Archives.

 ??  ?? Yoshiko (Shirley) Yamaguchi in Giza, Egypt, 1953,
08300.3 ©The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York / Artist Rights Society [ARS]. Photo by Isamu Noguchi.
Yoshiko (Shirley) Yamaguchi in Giza, Egypt, 1953, 08300.3 ©The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York / Artist Rights Society [ARS]. Photo by Isamu Noguchi.
 ??  ?? Museum of Egyptian Antiquitie­s, Cairo, Egypt, 1953,
08304.3 ©The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York / Artist Rights Society [ARS]. Photo by Isamu Noguchi.
Museum of Egyptian Antiquitie­s, Cairo, Egypt, 1953, 08304.3 ©The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York / Artist Rights Society [ARS]. Photo by Isamu Noguchi.
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 ??  ?? Top, left to right: Mishra Yantra, Jantar Mantar; New Dehli, India, 1949
08446.4 ©The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York / Artist Rights Society [ARS]. Photo by Isamu Noguchi. Jantar Mantar observator­y at Jaipur, Rajasthan, India, 1949-56
04983 ©The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York / Artist Rights Society [ARS]. Photo by Isamu Noguchi. Bottom: Isamu Noguchi, Bollingen Drawing, ink on paper, ca. 1949-1950. Collection of The Noguchi Museum.
Top, left to right: Mishra Yantra, Jantar Mantar; New Dehli, India, 1949 08446.4 ©The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York / Artist Rights Society [ARS]. Photo by Isamu Noguchi. Jantar Mantar observator­y at Jaipur, Rajasthan, India, 1949-56 04983 ©The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York / Artist Rights Society [ARS]. Photo by Isamu Noguchi. Bottom: Isamu Noguchi, Bollingen Drawing, ink on paper, ca. 1949-1950. Collection of The Noguchi Museum.
 ??  ?? Top, left to right: Dolmen in Brittany, France, c.1950,
08218.3 ©The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York / Artist Rights Society [ARS]. Photo by Isamu Noguchi. Isamu Noguchi, Bollingen Drawing, ink on paper, ca. 1949-1950. Collection of The Noguchi Museum.
Bottom: Isamu Noguchi in Versailles, France, 1953,
08224.4 ©The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York / Artist Rights Society [ARS]
Top, left to right: Dolmen in Brittany, France, c.1950, 08218.3 ©The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York / Artist Rights Society [ARS]. Photo by Isamu Noguchi. Isamu Noguchi, Bollingen Drawing, ink on paper, ca. 1949-1950. Collection of The Noguchi Museum. Bottom: Isamu Noguchi in Versailles, France, 1953, 08224.4 ©The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York / Artist Rights Society [ARS]
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 ??  ?? Jantar Mantar Observator­y, New Delhi, 1949,
5366 ©The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York / Artist Rights Society [ARS]. Photo by Isamu Noguchi.
Jantar Mantar Observator­y, New Delhi, 1949, 5366 ©The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York / Artist Rights Society [ARS]. Photo by Isamu Noguchi.

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