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Elizabeth Hammer joins AWNY as Production and Content Manager

Liz Hammer at the Hammond Museum's Japanese Stroll Garden.

As Asia Week NY’s online news and programs expands to year-round coverage and greatly increased activity, Elizabeth Hammer has joined the team to support these new endeavors.

Most of you know Liz from her years in Education at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where she wrote and taught about Asian art and ran the public lecture program, and in the Chinese Paintings department at Christie’s New York, where she was Senior Specialist and Head of Sale. Most recently, Liz served as Executive Director of the Hammond Museum and Japanese Stroll Garden in North Salem, NY.

Commenting on her plans for AWNY’s future programs, Liz noted, “The dealers, auction houses, and museums that make up AWNY offer the very best Asian art created and provide an incredible resource to collectors, scholars, and aficionados alike. I very much look forward to working together with all of you to expand the variety and number of events and activities related to Asian art to reach as many people as possible. I hope our members will actively send suggestions, ideas, and feedback to achieve the most creative and effective results that we can.”

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Miyako Yoshinaga Gallery – Exhibition Extended

Hai Zhang, American, b. 1976, Wuhan, Hubei Province, 2013, Archival pigment print on fiber paper, 28 x 18 in, 71.1 x 45.7 cm

Hai Zhang: Aged Innocence
September 17-December 11, 2021

The gallery is open Wednesday-Saturday, 11am-6pm, by appointment.

Between 2013 and 2017, Hai Zhang frequently returned to his homeland in China for his job assignment as a photographer. By then, the economic prosperity in the big cities was visibly affecting the lives in small towns and remote areas. The unprecedented changes before his eyes as a cultural insider urged him to capture tens of thousands of black-and-white and color images that exemplify the historically and culturally complex locales and their inhabitants. The exhibition features a selection from this massive photo archive in the format of small prints and large collages.

For more information, click here

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Lark Mason and Ryan Reynolds on Antiques Roadshow

Lark Mason and Ryan Reynolds on Antiques Roadshow, November 15, 2021

Actor Ryan Reynolds visited Antiques Roadshow with a prop, Cleopatra Egg, from the new Netflix movie Red Notice. A true veteran, Lark Mason offered an expert evaluation and jaw-dropping auction estimate in this whimsical sketch that has been enjoyed, so far, by more than 3 million viewers. Responding to Reynolds's contrived history of the object, Lark Mason played along and opined that the egg was “commissioned by Cleopatra at the end of her life” in 30 BC. Two, he said, can be found in “public collections”, but one of them “disappeared” during World War II, pilfered by German soldiers and hidden at a secure location, “up until recently”.

Red Notice, which is now available for streaming on Netflix and stars Dwayne Johnson and Gal Gadot, along with Reynolds, is an action-comedy that pairs an FBI profiler and the world's most wanted art thief.

To watch the Antiques Roadshow clip, click here

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Golden Treasures: Japanese Gold Lacquer Boxes

Gold Lacquer Box with Pine Cones, 1929, Makie-e gold lacquer with shell and pewter inlays on wood, 5 x 11 x 9 in.

Golden Treasures: Japanese Gold Lacquer Boxes at Thomsen Gallery
Gallery Exhibition, November 22-December 17, 2021

Thomsen Gallery at 9 E. 63rd St in New York opened a new exhibition of exceptional Japanese gold-lacquer boxes dating from the 18th century to the present. You are warmly invited to visit and view the unique art works in person

The masterworks in the exhibition are all examples of maki-e, which literally means “sprinkled pictures” and refers to the technique of sprinkling powders of gold and silver onto wet lacquer, a distinctly Japanese tradition that developed in the Heian Period (794 – 1185).

To register to make an appointment to visit and learn more about the gallery's Covid policies, please email [email protected] or click here.

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Zoom in to our next webinar on collecting contemporary Asian art

The Diane and Arthur Abbey Collection of Japanese Bamboo Baskets at The Metropolitan Museum of Art (Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art)

Join us for the webinar Ahead of the Curve: Collecting Contemporary Asian Art on Thursday, December 2 at 5pm EST on Zoom

Continuing their series of lively and thought-provoking webinars, Asia Week New York is pleased to present Ahead of the Curve: Collecting Contemporary Asian Art, a webinar on Thursday, December 2 at 5:00 p.m. EST.

TO REGISTER CLICK HERE.

As contemporary Asian artists find more inventive forms, styles and media to express their creativity, there are more opportunities to entice collectors–both novice and seasoned–to start or build upon a new or existing collection. Whether it’s a geometric-shaped Japanese bamboo basket, a complex Chinese ink drawing from a young emerging artist, a dramatic contemporary Japanese photograph or a contemporary Indian painting, there is one thing that unites them: the collector’s discerning eye.

In partnership with Joan B Mirviss LTD, the panel discussion will spotlight four areas of contemporary Asian art: Chinese ink painting, bamboo art, South Asian art, and Asian photography. With expert insights from gallery owners, auction house experts and curators, alongside their passionate collecting clients, Ahead of the Curve will examine how this flourishing of contemporary Asian art has opened up exciting avenues of interest for savvy collectors. The panelists will discuss the challenges of being at the forefront of their fields: in introducing and promoting an unfamiliar medium, changing public perceptions, establishing new relationships with artists, and illuminating their quality and artistic merits to institutions and the general public. This essential discussion will be moderated by Joan Mirviss, who herself has pioneered the collecting of contemporary Japanese ceramics.

The distinguished panel includes:

Diane and Arthur Abbey have been collecting Japanese bamboo baskets for over 25 years. The culmination of their collecting resulted in a 2017-2018 groundbreaking eight-month exhibition of 90 of their pieces in the Japanese galleries at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, attended by more than 400,000 visitors. Their outstanding collection, which has been gifted to The Met, helped fill a museum gap in the Met’s Japanese Collection. The couple worked closely with the entire Met’s Asian Department–particularly with Monika Bincsik, who served as curator of the exhibition and presently occupies The Diane and Arthur Abbey Curatorship for Japanese Decorative Arts, the first endowed position in the field in the Museum’s history. The Abbey Collection was based upon both emotional and visual appeal more than who the artist was. Some of the pieces are by artists who have been designated as Living National Treasures and some are by artists who are relatively unknown.

Anne Havinga is the Estrellita and Yousuf Karsh Chair of Photography at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. She has been a staff member at the MFA since 1989 and has led the Museum’s Photography section since 2001. Now that Photography has become its own separate department at the MFA, she is its first Chair. Havinga has strengthened the MFA’s photography collection in a number of ways, including the building up of its nineteenth century holdings, and the development of a concerted plan—with Anne Nishimura Morse, the MFA’s William and Helen Pounds Senior Curator of Japanese Art—to collect Japanese photography. Havinga has organized a variety of exhibitions, ranging from early photography to contemporary.

John and Denise Knight collect contemporary ink art and Chinese ceramics. Their collection also includes some examples of recent Western art by artists such as Brice Marden and Joan Mitchell. The Knights are engaged intellectually and aesthetically in the fields they collect and are particularly interested in art that embodies an East/West Asian cultural dialogue. The Knights have spent half of their adult lives in Asia and the Middle East and the remainder in New York, where they currently reside.

Bharti Malkani is a New York-based art collector and philanthropist. She believes in the transformative power of education and has been championing systemic education reform in her native India for many years. Malkani earned her BA at the University of Pennsylvania and began her career in Investor Relations representing small-cap, publicly traded technology companies to the investing community. After several years she left the corporate world for entrepreneurial pursuits and now devotes her time to several non-profit entities including as a member of the Director's Council at the Penn Museum, Philadelphia. Her art collecting journey started in the late 1990's, and her primary focus is on Modern and Contemporary South Asian Art.

Manjari Sihare Sutin heads sales for the Modern and Contemporary South Asian Department at Sotheby’s for the Americas. She joined the auction house in 2015 and brings a breadth and depth of knowledge to her role acquired over eighteen years of experience in the field. Manjari has worked extensively with a range of cultural institutions and private collections in India and the United States. She holds two graduate degrees in Art History and Visual Arts Administration: from the National Museum Institute, New Delhi, and New York University, respectively.

Nasreen Mohamedi, Untitled
Nasreen Mohamedi, Untitled, Oil on canvas board, circa 1964, 47 x 35 in. (119.3 x 88.9 cm.) (Courtesy of Sotheby’s)

After receiving her Bachelor of Arts degree in Art History from Stanford in 2006, Margo Thoma moved to Santa Fe, where she co-founded the gallery Eight Modern in 2007. In 2014, Thoma purchased the Santa-Fe based TAI Gallery, merging it with her American contemporary art gallery, Eight Modern, and the result is TAI Modern. She and bamboo expert, Koichiro Okada, have continued gallery founder Rob Coffland’s mission of encouraging and advocating for Japanese bamboo art world-wide.  Works by TAI Modern artists have been placed in some of the country’s most prestigious institutions, including the Art Institute of Chicago and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, among others.

Craig L. Yee is a co-founding director of INK Studio, a Beijing and New York-based gallery and experimental art space devoted to researching, documenting and exhibiting ink as a medium, language and discourse for the creation of contemporary art. Mr. Yee has played a central organizational and editorial role in a number of major university and museum research projects on classical Chinese painting including New Songs on Ancient Tunes (2007) at the Honolulu Academy of Arts, Selected Masterworks of Modern Chinese Painting (2010) at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, and Alternative Dreams (2016), a multi-year research and exhibition program on seventeenth-century Chinese painting at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

Originally from Japan, Miyako Yoshinaga founded her namesake gallery in 1999 in New York City, MIYAKO YOSHINAGA. It has flourished as a premier showcase promoting international artists with a focus on innovation and cross-boundary practices. The gallery has also been at the forefront of establishing Japanese and other Asian photography as a viable component in the international art arena. She has been curating survey exhibitions for Japanese and Korean master photographers with a scholarly emphasis, while fostering younger artists’ careers and ambitious projects through exhibitions and international art fairs.

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Photographs by Eric Zetterquist at Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens

Eric Zetterquist, Corvette C8 (Red Liseret), 2021, smb.jpg, 60 x 180 cm.

Salient Lines–Vintage and Supercar Portraits by Eric Zetterquist
November 13-December 26, 2021, Garden Exhibition

Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens is pleased to debut Eric Zetterquist’s work with the Sculpture in Motion exhibition. Eric Zetterquist’s art has always been about celebrating brilliant form. He is best known for abstractions that are derived from his photographs of ancient objects, which have been exhibited in museums and galleries in the US, China, Japan, Taiwan and Thailand. Often shown together with their “source objects”, the aim of the artist is to get his audience to stop and see – not just look – at beautiful form.

A lifelong auto enthusiast, Zetterquist has now turned his lens to the glories of brilliant automotive design. Using a similar technique, he photographs cars and amplifies the salient, form-defining lines. He then turns them into large, inky abstractions reminiscent of Asian calligraphy.

For more information click here.

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New Exhibition at TAI Modern

Kojiro Yoshiaki, Breaking Composition #16, 2017, kiln-cast & slumped foaming glass, 4.50 x 11.00 x 11.00 in.

Mountains & Sky
November 19-December 31, 2021

It is impossible to live in Santa Fe without falling a little bit in love with the mountains and sky. This winter, TAI Modern pays homage to these pillars of the high desert landscape with an exhibition of works from Japan and America that evoke or are inspired by the natural world.

Mountains and Sky brings together a selection of vessel makers, painters, and sculptors. The references to nature can be straightforward, as in Black Mesa, Linda Whitaker’s powerful oil-pastel of a local landscape, or more difficult to pinpoint, as in Hatakeyama Seido’s Mountain Range, a jar-shaped bamboo basket with a decorative knotted motif reminiscent of the titular forms.

“For me, inspiration comes from the workings of nature, both large and small, near and distant” Japanese sculptor Nagakura Kenichi wrote in 2016. “My desire is to share with other human beings the silent voice of nature.” His work Looking Through a Mountain Sky exemplifies the guiding themes of this exhibition, possessing both an earthy gravity and a form that seems to stretch skyward.

For more information click here

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Object in Focus

Samurai armor with dō-maru, Early Edo period, 17th-18th century, courtesy of Giuseppe Piva Japanese Art

Certificate: The armor is accompanied by a certificate of registration as Koshu Tokubetsu Kicho Shiryo (Especially Important Armor Object) no. 1277 issued by the Nihon Katchu Bugu Kenkyu Hozon Kai (Japanese Armor Preservation Society), 2020.11.01

This flamboyant Samurai armor is entirely made of small individual scales (hon-kozane), lacquered in black and gold and laced together with blue, orange, and white silk, in order to create a multicolored pattern.

The helmet (kabuto) is very elaborate, of suji-bachi construction, made of 62 plates joined with hammered rivets, with three gilt-copper shinodare, descending in the front from a rich tehen-no-kanamono (decorative fittings around the edge of the opening at the top of the helmet). The maedate (front ornament) is a classical ken-kuwagata, with stylized horns and a votive sword. The neck protection (shikoro) has the same color-scheme as the whole armor. The cuirass () is of dō-maru type and made into a single piece with individual small scales laced together, which were used in the early suits of armor. As expected in an armor of the early Edo period, the shoulder guards (chū-sode) are small, and the neck protection is of the hineno-type, following the shape of the shoulders.

The suit of armor bears a rare samurai family crest in the design of three white oak leaves. This appears not only on the helmet’s flanges (fukigaeshi), but also on all the gilt-copper support plates (kanamono) of the cuirass.

For more information, click here

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Miyako Yoshinaga at Paris Photo 2021

Yojiro Imasaka, Illuminating Earth 17, 2019, Toned gelatin silver print, edition of 2 + 1 artist proof, 60 x 99 in / 152.4 x 251.5 cm © Yojiro Imasaka

November 11-14

Grand Palais Ephémère
Champ-de-Mars, Place Joffre, 75007 Paris
and online viewing room

November 11-14th, 2021
1pm – 8pm from Thursday 11th to Saturday 13th
1pm – 7pm on Sunday 14th
For more information, click here.

Miyako Yoshinaga is featuring works by Rose Farrell & George Parkin, Hitoshi Fugo, Mikiko Hara, Yojiro Imasaka, Karen Miranda Rivadeneira, and Bianca Sforni. (Stand F17).

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Fall 2021 New Acquisitions: The Art of Japan

Hasui (1883 -1957), Evening Snow at Terajima, 1920, Woodblock Print, Series: 12 Views of Tokyo

35 newly acquired prints have been added, including: a collection of Charles Bartlett woodblocks and etchings; a group of Kunisada actor portraits published by Kinshodo; two fine pre-earthquake Hasui Prints and a rare Kuniyoshi triptych that is known only in incomplete examples.

To see the prints, click here.

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