This web magazine proposes new ways to enjoy kogei.
Through interviews with creators, artists and people who live in Hokuriku,
discover the allure of Kogei from various angles.
“Kogei Kairo” [“corridor of traditional Japanese craft”] was held as a major event of the Kanazawa 21st Century Kogei Festival,* with the idea of “the craft world spreading across town.” Close to the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa in the Hirosaka neighborhood, the National Craft Museum opened in 2020. In part 1 of this article series, “Go for Kogei” reports on “Kogei Kairo in the History Museum,” which ran from October 23rd to the 25th, and in part 2, on “Kogei Kairo in Hirosaka,” which ran from October 10th to November 23rd.
* The Kanazawa 21st Century Kogei Festival is an annual large-scale festival held in Kanazawa City, Ishikawa Prefecture, with the aim of discovering and sharing the charm of traditional Japanese craft. The festival is divided into five sections: “Shuzen Shokusai,” a feast plated and presented with kogei dishware and art; the “Kogei Kairo,” a stroll through the exhibitions shown in machiya, Japanese townhouses scattered through the city;“Kanazawa Mirai Chakai,”where the tea ceremonies are inspired by various venues and themes; the “Kanazawa Mirai Kogei-bu,” a children’s workshop; and the “Kanazawa Art Space Link,” a collaborative project with a focus on art spaces.
The primary venue for “Kogei Kairo” is the Ishikawa Prefectural History Museum. Once the residence of the Kaga Provence’s chief samurai retainer of the same name, the Honda Forest now hosts several cultural facilities, including the Ishikawa Prefectural Museum of Art, the Kaga Honda
Museum [a private museum of the samurai family], and the Ishikawa Prefectural History Museum, which is also referred to as “Ishikawa’s Red Brick Museum.”
The National Craft Museum was relocated from Tokyo just this autumn, garnering attention from all over the country to this spot. To coincide with the National Craft Museum’s opening, the Ishikawa Prefectural History Museum was chosen as the main venue for October 25th.
A total of 21 artists were featured at the “Kogei Kairo in the History Museum.” The minimal and clear exhibition allowed each artist’s individuality to shine, and the sheer range on display from folk art to contemporary art—pottery, metalwork, lacquer art, glass, Kaga-yuzen silk and Kanazawa’s other rarer craft traditions—made me realize the depth and breadth of Kanazawa’s kogei.
Occasionally the artist was present, and I was blessed with the opportunity to interact with them directly. On this day, I met Hirotake Imanishi, who had studied molecular cytology and had gone from doing doctoral research to ceramic art. Although he is currently based in Kanazawa, he is originally of the third generation of a family kiln in Nara Prefecture.
This new work from Imanishi also expresses “life energy” through a motif of cells, of which he’s familiar from his research. “This piece is a hybrid work that uses traditional glaze and Kutani-ware painting on a modern material, the translucent clay. The clay body is the structure (the skeleton) and the glaze is as a skin to make the image of a cell,” he explains as he lights the piece from underneath with his smartphone.
Photos of the works were permissible, save for two, and most of the works were viewable from 360 degrees and up close. The venue was a renovated former military armory, and the old-style arched windows framed the art as people took pictures of their favorite pieces.
As the exhibition was designed for appreciating a variety of works in one place, and as it neighbored other craft museums in the city center, many people went to and from surrounding
cultural facilities. There seemed to be a wide range of ages of both regular locals and tourists who came to enjoy the exhibition.
Kanazawa 21st Century Kogei Festival 2020: Kogei Kairo
Download the Kogei Kairo brochure
Part 1: Kogei Kairo in the History Museum
when: Fri., Oct. 23rd to Sun., Oct. 25th; where: Ishikawa Prefectural History Museum An exhibition of 21 artists, ranging from traditional Japanese craft to contemporary art. Free admission; works may be procured.
Part 2: Kogei Kairo in Hirosaka
when: Thur., Oct. 10th to Tue., Nov. 3rd; where: Hirosaka Shopping District Walk along the sidewalk in the Hirosaka neighborhood as shop windows become an art gallery. Free admission; works may be procured.
Yuki Sakashita (author of the original Japanese article)(Tsukitoito/ Communication director)
Born in Himi, Toyama Prefecture. Editor, writer and planner based in Kanazawa, Ishikawa Prefecture. After working as an editor of a town magazine, a winery and a sake brewery, she became a freelancer. She has been living in Kanazawa since 2008. A qualified curator and sake taster, she loves travel, history and alcohol. Also a crafty person who likes to create crafts by herself such as pottery, glass blowing, lacquerware, woodwork, metalwork, and Japanese paper.