What exactly is a Japanese tea house, and what makes the very best chashitsu? Let’s take a look!
I came across this selection of truly amazing works by Japanese glass artist Yukako Kojima. Not only are they captivating, they're also very complex and abstract in shape.
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I came across this selection of truly amazing works by Japanese glass artist Yukako Kojima. Not only are they captivating, they're also very complex and abstract in shape.
I came across this selection of truly amazing works by Japanese glass artist Yukako Kojima. Not only are they captivating, they're also very complex and abstract in shape.
The “farewell comb” from “Sakaki (The Sacred Tree)” / “Sekiya (A Meeting at the Frontier)”/ “Kiritsubo” / Emergence “Butterfly” / “Nagisa-no-in”, The Tale of Ise / Leaf of Words / Gazing into the a…
壁面作品。月夜の空の色と光をイメージした作品。配置の仕方によって違った見せ方ができる。 1パーツ:H195×W195×D50mm
The Water/Glass House designed by Japanese architect Kengo Kuma for a client at the resort spa town of Atami. The most striking feature of the villa is the oval glass dining room which sits like an island in the middle of an overflow pool on a huge gra...
A "chashitsu," which literally means “tearoom” in Japanese, is a freestanding, pavilion-like structure that was used for tea ceremonies, contemplation, and meditation in ancient Japan.
Hiroshi Yamano's new "Scene of Japan" art glass series is an extension of the artist’s "From East to West" series
Ritsue Mishima is a Japanese-Italian glass artist. She uses exclusively colourless glass. Her work stands as a sampler of old and innovative techniques.
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Since the early 1980s Japanese artist Niyoko Ikuta has explored the properties of glass which she uses to make etheral geometric sequences manifested as layered sculptures. One of the leading figures in Japanese glass art, Ikuta’s works have been collected by institutions worldwide including the V&A in London and the Corning Museum of Glass in the U.S. She shares about her work via V&A: I am captivated by the complexity of light as it reflects, refracts, and passes through broken cross sections of plate glass. More
The “farewell comb” from “Sakaki (The Sacred Tree)” / “Sekiya (A Meeting at the Frontier)”/ “Kiritsubo” / Emergence “Butterfly” / “Nagisa-no-in”, The Tale of Ise / Leaf of Words / Gazing into the a…
Ritsue Mishima - Artworks - Pierre Marie Giraud, Brussels, ParisJapanese, born in 1962 in KyotoLives and works in Venice, ItalyWith her fascination for the plays of light and transparency, Ritsue Mishima is at home in Venice - surrounded by the water. Working in close collaboration with the city’s artisans, the Japanese artist orchestrates in the furnaces of glass blowers, the production of her artworks in an attempt to capture and shape light itself.Her energetic and sculptural production exclusively uses colourless glass, which imbues the objects with the chance and accident of a making process that passes between many hands.The work of Ritsue Mishima is included in the collections of Musée des Arts décoratifs in Paris, Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam.
JAPANKURU's Traditional Japanese Craft Edo Kiriko Glassware from Kagami Crystal page. The best travel guides, tourism & sightseeing information, news, events, culture, and stories from around Japan.
徳島県の「Kamikatz Public House」の設計で注目した建築家の仕事をみてみよう。1999年から2002年の間、隈研吾建築都市設計事務所に入...
the 'glass tea house mondrian' by japanese artist hiroshi sugimoto for the venice architecture biennale 2014 unites wood, glass and water as a pavilion.
"In Australia, I live among trees; trees are an essential factor for me to fell connected and at home." Japanese artist Kayo Yokoyama creates beautifully
I came across this selection of truly amazing works by Japanese glass artist Yukako Kojima. Not only are they captivating, they're also very complex and abstract in shape.
Ritsue Mishima - Artworks - Pierre Marie Giraud, Brussels, ParisJapanese, born in 1962 in KyotoLives and works in Venice, ItalyWith her fascination for the plays of light and transparency, Ritsue Mishima is at home in Venice - surrounded by the water. Working in close collaboration with the city’s artisans, the Japanese artist orchestrates in the furnaces of glass blowers, the production of her artworks in an attempt to capture and shape light itself.Her energetic and sculptural production exclusively uses colourless glass, which imbues the objects with the chance and accident of a making process that passes between many hands.The work of Ritsue Mishima is included in the collections of Musée des Arts décoratifs in Paris, Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam.
"In Australia, I live among trees; trees are an essential factor for me to fell connected and at home." Japanese artist Kayo Yokoyama creates beautifully
Incredible Japanese craftspeople will show you the power of this versatile material.
Completed in 2016 in Ōta, Japan. Images by Seiichi Ohsawa. Located in an alleyway off a shopping street, this property is closely bounded on the east by a road and on the south by a three-story apartment...