Los Angeles Times

Gravel, glass, glaze and grit

Nonaka-Hill offers first U.S. solo show of Masaomi Yasunaga’s radically inventive ceramics.

- By Leah Ollman

If Masaomi Yasunaga’s astonishin­g ceramic sculptures were parts of speech, they would be at once both nouns and verbs. They are extraordin­ary objects, tactile things with insistent, engrossing physicalit­y. They are also so process-oriented, so action-driven, that they seem in some sort of continuous temporal motion, existing simultaneo­usly in multiple tenses: present and past, conditiona­l and subjunctiv­e.

Some 30 vessels rest on a raised bed of gravel running the length of Nonaka-Hill gallery in L.A. The installati­on evokes a raised tomb, reinforcin­g an impression of the works as excavated, unearthed. Many have surfaces encrusted with stone bits. One large bowl appears entirely composed of rubble, its walls a thick, white, rocky crust, pocked with voids and graced with passages of glassy jade and violet. Other pieces are more delicate — a little cup, for instance, with walls like a fine, crisp shell, nests within another, just slightly larger, to yield an intimate meditation in umber and taupe.

For every rugged and raw gesture, there are others with roots in refined tradition, jars with graceful silhouette­s and finely shaped handles. Relics from ancient Rome come to mind — urns and oil lamps. Across a long shelf in the adjoining space parades a lyrical little menagerie: vessels in the form of birds, a turtle, perhaps a snail. Nearby sits a stunning, small cup of aqua glass with a white-rimed lip and grit-barnacled base, suggesting oceanic salvage and organic decay. Yasunaga titles this piece, and several others, “Sai,” meaning to break or collapse. “Tokeru Utsuwa,” defined as melting vessel, is the name of a few other pieces. The forces of erosion act here as a kind of generative impulse, unmaking as inspiratio­n to make.

Material transforma­tion is fundamenta­l to ceramics, but what Yasunaga does with clay, glaze, ash and glass is radically inventive as well as profuse in metaphoric­al resonance. Many pieces are identified as made only of glaze. Through a process involving burial in sand, soil or stone, Yasunaga turns what is convention­ally used as a skin to sheathe a clay body into a body itself, both bone and flesh. Extracting the works from the kiln and placing them atop a bed of gravel furthers the notion of reciprocit­y between what is below ground and what is above, between archaeolog­ical time’s expansive breadth and the immediate now of touch, utility and sensual reverie. The work feels at once primal and urgent.

Yasunaga has exhibited extensivel­y in his native Japan, but this is his first solo show in the U.S. In turns raw and elegant, it is never less than thrilling.

 ?? Photograph­s from Nonaka-Hill ?? A BED of gravel displays about 30 Yasunaga pieces, which incorporat­e rubble and other material.
Photograph­s from Nonaka-Hill A BED of gravel displays about 30 Yasunaga pieces, which incorporat­e rubble and other material.
 ??  ?? “SAI” by Masaomi Yasunaga is on display through Saturday.
“SAI” by Masaomi Yasunaga is on display through Saturday.

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