On view

Welcome Gallery
David Nasher Haemisegger Gallery

Homage to Sawada Tetsurō,

1990s

Toshiko Takaezu, 1922–2011; born Pepe’ekeo, HI; died Honolulu, HI
2008-6
In 1971, Takaezu helped arrange an exhibition of the work of the abstract painter Tetsurō Sawada at the Hunterdon Art Center (now the Hunterdon Art Museum) in Clinton, New Jersey. Sawada entrusted Takaezu to donate some of the exhibited paintings to museums on her behalf, inviting her to keep one. Years later, Takaezu noticed a connection between the work she chose (at right) and a ceramic from her Tree series, prompting the renaming of this work, which is on view nearby: “I made a tree and it was the most unusual thing that the colors of the painting and my tree are exactly alike. So now I’ve named the tree Homage to Tetsurō Sawada.” Takaezu’s original inspiration for her Tree series was the sight of Hawaiian forests burned by lava flows. The blackened earth tones of her work, suggesting natural destruction, resonate with the violent gestures of the slashing brushstrokes in Sawada’s paintings.

Information

Title
Homage to Sawada Tetsurō
Dates

1990s

Medium
Stoneware
Dimensions
h. 170.8 cm, diam. 33.5 cm (67 1/4 x 13 3/16 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of the artist
Object Number
2008-6
Place Made

North America, United States

Culture
Materials

Toshiko Takaezu, Quakertown, New Jersey, gift; to Princeton University Art Museum, 2008.