From Deseret News archives:
Art in silence
Rie Hachiyanagi's show at BYU employs blank handmade paper
It alters our perception and state of being,
Renewing the world that surrounds us.
Marriage. Funeral.
Marking of our paths."
Rie Hachiyanagi
For those thoroughly enmeshed in occidental reasoning, "getting" Rie Hachiyanagi's installation "Rituals of Being" may be an arduous task. If, on the other hand, we can enlarge our concept of what art should and could be even for a small moment there are genuine rewards.
Besides, according to Hachiyanagi, "there's nothing to, quote-unquote, 'get.' There's no right answer."
Viewers/participants need only enter one of the dimly lighted installation domains and wait. With patience and a little mental effort, the art will eventually wash over them with stunning silence and stimulating lucidity.
"I always want my work to be experiential," said Hachiyanagi. "Something that's not necessarily explainable but something experienced by the body and mind."
Though educated and trained at American universities in the traditional modes of art today she teaches freshman drawing and advanced studio art (painting, sculpture and printmaking) at Mount Holyoke College in Massachusetts Hachiyanagi chose a more conceptual way to express herself: blank, handmade paper.
"Paper without markings remains silent," Hachiyanagi said. "I create blank sheets of paper in order to let this speechlessness be visually loud and to let silence penetrate itself."
Hachiyanagi's philosophy is very much shaped by her Japanese traditions and culture. She grew up with a reverence for paper. "We use paper in Shinto rituals," she said. (Shinto is the ancient Japanese form of worship where plants, animals, deities and humans co-exist as equals.) "Our altars tend to have blank pieces of paper, something without words. It symbolizes cleansing, purity, something that is unspeakable."
According to Hachiyanagi, Shinto does not have texts or a doctrine; rather, worshippers try to learn the way of living by simply living. In their rituals they tend to have lots of blank pieces of paper, folded in certain ways and placed in certain places, which signify or create meaning.
Comments
- Boyle hopes debut album 'delivers' 4:17 p.m.
- Fans greet returning Real Salt Lake 4:16 p.m.
- RSL protects 11 players from draft 4:00 p.m.
- Man allegedly fired at motorist 4:00 p.m.
- Doctor faces voyeurism charges 3:57 p.m.
- Payson, chamber seek medical firm 2:49 p.m.
- Protests against Phoenix LDS temple 2:47 p.m.
- Palin's book tour hits Fort Bragg 2:42 p.m.
- Matheson unsure about health bill 2:40 p.m.
- BYU's Lamb, Jorgensen reprimanded 2:38 p.m.
- Buttars wants to limit gay rights laws
214 - Glenn Beck to enter politics?
212 - RSL wins MLS Cup on penalty kicks
189 - Palin plans tour stop in Utah
178 - BYU records with win
132 - Palin's book shows she's unqualified
131 - Bronco, Kyle rubber match
110 - Officer cleared in Cardall Taser case
103 - BYU cuts Women's Research Inst.
103 - Jazz finally win in San Antonio
99
Game Crazy is the nation's second largest video game retailer and they...
Ian is way better than any LineBacker in the whole state of Utah.He should go...
BREAKING NEWS Mrs. Sarah Palin will be here NEXT. Buy the book, get it...
The 11 I would have protected are the same ones on this list. I am just glad...
I would LOVE to live next to a Mormon Temple. They are beautiful examples of...
There is a middle way -- BOTH fossil fuels AND renewables! Neither...
'If the local news starts covering Spring Break, etc, I would think you would...
Hey all you soccer haters. If your going to post something stupid. Write it...
What are you getting for free? You're getting your cake and eating it too....
High-paying executive jobs? Really? Where? What are you talking about?
“Why not? They (governments) make affirmative statements about...



You can be the first to comment on this story.