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Kitamura Junko

  • Exhibitions
  • biography
  • kitamura bio pt 2
  • Kitamura Junko 北村 純子
  • kitamura bio pt 1
  • pull quote
  • kitamura pt 3
  • video
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  • Exhibitions
    • The Winter Show 2024

      The Winter Show 2024

      Taking Space, Making Space 19 - 28 Jan 2024
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    • Listening to Clay

      Listening to Clay

      Works available by artists featured in the latest book by Alice & Halsey North and Louise Cort 20 Jul - 26 Aug 2022
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    • Transcendent Kyoto

      Transcendent Kyoto

      Winter 2022 4 Jan - 18 Feb 2022
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    • Seen|Unseen

      Seen|Unseen

      New Artworks by Akiyama Yō and Kitamura Junko 2 Nov - 16 Dec 2020
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    • Vessel Explored / Vessel Transformed - Tomimoto Kenkichi and his Enduring Legacy

      Vessel Explored / Vessel Transformed - Tomimoto Kenkichi and his Enduring Legacy

      13 Mar - 26 Apr 2019
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    • Timeless Elegance in Japanese Art: Celebrating 40 Years!

      Timeless Elegance in Japanese Art: Celebrating 40 Years!

      Asia Week New York 9 Mar - 14 Apr 2017
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    • A Palette for Genius

      A Palette for Genius

      Japanese Water Jars for the Tea Ceremony 10 Mar - 15 Apr 2016
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    • A Moment in Time

      A Moment in Time

      Akiyama Yō and Kitamura Junko 27 Apr - 29 May 2015
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    • Japan in Black and White

      Japan in Black and White

      Ink and Clay 14 Mar - 25 Apr 2014
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    • The Eight Winds

      The Eight Winds

      Chinese Influence on Japanese Ceramics 18 Sep - 31 Oct 2013
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    • The Salon Art + Design

      The Salon Art + Design

      Park Avenue Armory, NYC 8 - 12 Nov 2012
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    • Soaring Voices

      Soaring Voices

      Contemporary Japanese Women Ceramic Artists 16 Oct - 31 Dec 2011
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    • Touch Fire

      Touch Fire

      Contemporary Japanese Ceramics by Women Artists 9 Oct 2009 - 28 Feb 2010
      Read more
    • Breaking the Mold / Kata O Yaburu

      Breaking the Mold / Kata O Yaburu

      Leading Japanese Women Ceramists 8 Nov - 15 Dec 2007
      Read more
  • biography

    Two influential teachers of ceramists instructed Kitamura Junko, one a co-founder of the Sōdeisha group, Suzuki Osamu, (1926-2001) and the other, Kondō Yutaka (1932-83), a professor at Kyoto City University of Art where Kitamura completed her MFA. Inspired by the ancient 15th century Korean tradition of punch’ong ware of slip-inlay, Kitamura creates thickly walled, wheel-thrown vessels with intricate impressed designs consisting of miniscule concentric dots and geometric punching that meld together with adjoining configurations to make intricate patterns recall textile patterns or celestial constellations when inlaid with a creamy white slip. Kitamura’s sculptural forms have been featured in solo and group shows across the globe and now grace numerous museum collections around this country. ¬

    1956 Born in Kyoto
    1982 Completed MFA program at the Kyoto City University of Art

    Awards:

    1980 Awarded the Acquisition Prize, Kyoto City University of Art Exhibition
    1986 Awarded the Acquisition Prize, Kyoto Selective Exhibitions of Arts and Crafts
    1990 Received the Fletcher Challenge Ceramics Award (also in 1992), New Zealand
    1997 Received the Varazdin Prize, World Triennial Exhibition of Small Ceramics, Zagreb

    Public Collections:

    Auckland War Memorial Museum, Auckland, New Zealand
    British Museum, London, UK
    Brooklyn Museum, NY
    Ibaraki Ceramic Art Museum, Kasama
    Kyoto City University of Art, Kyoto
    Kyoto Culture Museum
    Kyoto Prefecture
    Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX
    Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA
    Museum of Modern Ceramic Art, Gifu
    The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo
    Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, MO
    Smith College Museum of Art, Northampton MA
    Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC
    Samuel P. Harn Museum of Art, Gainesville, FL

  • kitamura bio pt 2

    kitamura bio pt 2

    Like her fellow pioneering female Japanese ceramicists, Kitamura brings a fresh perspective into a field that had long excluded them. Her painterly instincts, developed as the daughter of an abstract painter, combined with the visual language of textiles and lacquer crafts that flourished in her hometown of Kyoto, inform her elegant yet otherworldly sculptures. She uses a homemade bamboo tool to incise intricate, rippling geometric patterns in white slip inlay over a dark, matte, black slip-covered body with the precision of a lacemaker. A study in contrasts, her starkly black-and-white works cut dramatic profiles that belie their fluid, curving forms.

  • Kitamura Junko 北村 純子

    Kitamura Junko 北村 純子

  • kitamura bio pt 1

    kitamura bio pt 1

    Born 1956, Kyoto, Japan

    KITAMURA JUNKO studied under two extremely influential figures in the world of Japanese ceramics: Suzuki Osamu (1926-2001), a co-founder of the avant-garde Sodeisha group, and Kondō Yutaka (1932-83), a professor at Kyoto City University of Art where Kitamura completed her MFA. Inspired by the ancient 15th-century Korean tradition of punch’ong ware with slip-inlay, Kitamura creates thickly walled, wheel-thrown ceramic vessels with intricate impressed designs, consisting of minuscule concentric dots and geometric punching. Her designs give the appearance of melding together with the adjoining configurations to make intricate patterns recalling textiles or celestial constellations when inlaid with a creamy white slip. Kitamura’s contemporary clay forms have been featured in solo and group shows across the globe and now grace numerous museum collections around this country.

  • pull quote

    "When you look up at the moon in the night sky, you can feel its existence not only in the part reflecting the light of the sun, but also in the part that melts into the darkness and cannot be seen.
    It seems that the part that is invisible makes the portion we can see all the more beautiful."

    KITAMURA JUNKO

  • kitamura pt 3

    kitamura pt 3

    Selected Public Collections: 

    National Museum of Asian Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC
    Asian Art Museum, San Francisco, CA
    Auckland War Memorial Museum, New Zealand
    British Museum, London, UK
    Brooklyn Museum, NY
    Cincinnati Art Museum, OH
    Ibaraki Ceramic Art Museum, Japan
    Kyoto City University of Arts, Japan
    Kyoto Prefectural Library and Archives, Japan
    Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY
    Minneapolis Institute of Art, MN
    Musée national des arts asiatiques – Guimet, Paris, France
    Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA
    Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX
    Museum of Kyoto, Japan
    Museum of Modern Ceramic Art, Gifu, Japan
    National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, Japan
    Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, MA
    Portland Art Museum, OR
    Saint Louis Art Museum, MO
    Samuel P. Harn Museum of Art, Gainesville, FL
    Smith College Museum of Art, Northampton, MA
    Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT

  • video

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