Exhibition/event has ended.
[Image: Adam Silverman "Tide Jar" (2023) Stoneware h28.8 x w24 d23cm ©︎Adam Silverman]

Adam Silverman "Umi no Tsubo"

Tomio Koyama Gallery Tennoz
Finished

Artists

Adam Silverman
This exhibition, which will be Adam Silverman's sixth show with the gallery and his first solo show with the gallery in seven years, introduces fifteen works from his new “Tide Jar” series, created with glazes made with materials collected from the shores of various oceans.

Adam Silverman’s ceramic works, characterized by their uneven textures reminiscent of crust and lava, and organic circular forms evoking an egg or a planet, permeate with a distinct enigmatic presence as if having been born from the very earth itself. At the same time, the air of sophistication surrounding his works is indeed attributed to his sharp sensibility that draws from his studies in architecture, as well as his background as a founding member of the fashion brand “X-Large,” which became synonymous with 90s’ American west coast street culture.

Silverman began producing ceramics as a teenager and continued until 2022 when he became a full-time ceramic artist and has since continued to produce work through new and unique approaches informed by a contemporary perspective. His work has been collected by various public institutions across the globe including the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Nasher Sculpture Center (Dallas, Texas), and the Israel Museum.

The “Tide Jar” series is inspired by the “Moon Jar,” a type of Korean white porcelain made during the Joseon dynasty, whose name derives from its shape and color of the glaze that resembles the coloration of the moon.

“Tide” as used in the title of the work refers to the rise and fall of the seas caused by the effects of the gradational forces exerted by the moon. The resulting forces of the tides are experienced as waves and currents of the ocean; these are irregular forces, motions, and energies that vary from gentle to rolling, to violent.

The new works presented in the exhibition are made with materials collected from the shores of the Atlantic Ocean in New England, and from the shores of the Pacific Ocean in California and Kauai, Hawaii. These materials, such as clays, driftwood, seaweed, sand, seashells, salt, and rusty metals are all used to make glazes, to feed the fire, or as atmospheric additives inside the kiln to enhance the firing environment. Many of the pieces are fired several times in extreme atmospheres and temperatures, and through Silverman’s remarkable artistry, come to manifest as highly ambitious and unprecedented works of ceramic.

Ocean materials from different regions come together to create a single world within the work. What they reflect is the calm yet powerful gaze of the artist who expresses a profound appreciation for nature.

Schedule

Apr 6 (Thu) 2023-Apr 28 (Fri) 2023 

Opening Hours Information

Hours
11:00-18:00
Closed
Sunday, Monday, Holidays
FeeFree
Websitehttp://tomiokoyamagallery.com/en/exhibitions/silverman2023/
VenueTomio Koyama Gallery Tennoz
http://tomiokoyamagallery.com/en/
Location4F Terrada Art Complex Ⅰ, 1-33-10 Higashi-Shinagawa, Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo 140-0002
Access9 minute walk from exit B at Tennozu Isle Station on the Rinkai line, 10 minute walk from the South exit of Tennozu Isle Station on the Tokyo Monorail line, 9 minute walk from the North exit of Shimbamba Station on the Keikyu line.
Phone03-6459-4030
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