Masayuki Nagare
{{Short description|Japanese sculptor (1923–2018)}}
{{Infobox artist
| honorific_prefix =
| name = Masayuki Nagare
| honorific_suffix =
| image = Masayuki Nagare Shinchosha 1962-12.jpg
| native_name = 流 政之 (Nagare Masayuki)
| native_name_lang = Japanese
| birth_name =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1923|02|14}}
| birth_place = Nagasaki, Japan
| baptised =
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2018|07|07|1923|02|14}}
| death_place =
| resting_place =
| resting_place_coordinates =
| nationality =
| education = Ritsumeikan University (incomplete)
| alma_mater =
| known_for = Modernist sculpture, stone carving
| notable_works = Cloud Fortress, Sakimori (Frontier Guardian), Receiving (受 Ju), Transcendence (The Banker's Heart)
| style = Modernism, influenced by Shinto, Zen Buddhism, and Japanese martial arts
| father = Kojuro Nakagawa (founder of Ritsumeikan University)
}}
{{nihongo|Masayuki Nagare|流 政之|Nagare Masayuki|February 14, 1923 – July 7, 2018}} was a modernist Japanese sculptor, nicknamed "Samurai Artist" for his commitment to traditional Japanese aesthetics.{{cite web|title=Nagare Masayuki, "Stone Riddle"|url=http://artmuseum.princeton.edu/campus-art/objects/31575#zoom=17&lat=40.3505&lon=-74.6511|website=Princeton Campus Art|accessdate=25 May 2015}} He was born in 1923 in Nagasaki to Kojuro Nakagawa, the founder and president of Ritsumeikan University in Kyoto.{{cite web|title=Profile|url=http://www.nagaremasayuki.com/flash-en/index.html|website=Masayuki Nagare Official Website|accessdate=25 May 2015}} As a teenager, he received training in the martial arts of a samurai, particularly swordsmanship,{{cite web|title=Profile|url=http://www.nagaremasayuki.com/flash-en/index.html|website=Masayuki Nagare Official Website|accessdate=25 May 2015}} and lived in several temples in Kyoto, where he observed the patterns of rocks, plants, and water created by traditional landscape artists.{{cite web|title=Masayuki Nagare, "Sculpture: New to America"|url=http://www.jasonmccoyinc.com/ex_nagare07/ex_nagare07_frames.html|website=Jason McCoy Gallery|accessdate=25 May 2015}}
In 1942, he enrolled at Ritsumeikan University, where he studied Shinto and was apprenticed to a master swordsmith. He left university in 1943 to join the Imperial Japanese Navy and did not return to complete his studies. Nagare served as a Zero Fighter pilot in the Pacific War. After the War, he traveled all over Honshu Island until the mid-1950s, witnessing the desolation of the ruined countryside, developing a thorough understanding of the Japanese landscape, and becoming interested in local crafts such as pottery. His fascination with graveyard tombstones that had survived wartime bombing led to his longtime choice of stone as his preferred medium.{{cite web|title=Profile|url=http://www.nagaremasayuki.com/flash-en/index.html|website=Masayuki Nagare Official Website|accessdate=25 May 2015}}{{cite web|title=Nagare Masayuki, "Stone Riddle"|url=http://artmuseum.princeton.edu/campus-art/objects/31575#zoom=17&lat=40.3505&lon=-74.6511|website=Princeton Campus Art|accessdate=25 May 2015}}{{cite web|title=Masayuki Nagare, "Sculpture: New to America"|url=http://www.jasonmccoyinc.com/ex_nagare07/ex_nagare07_frames.html|website=Jason McCoy Gallery|accessdate=25 May 2015}}{{cite news|last1=Killeen|first1=Michael|title=Penn's Blossoms, Samurai Sculptor, Blue Collars: 57th Street|url=https://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aEXvZxdlC1Ug|agency=Bloomberg.com|date=February 12, 2007}}
Nagare's art is strongly influenced by Shinto, Zen Buddhism, and traditional Japanese martial arts. His principal stone-carving techniques include warehada ("cracked skin" or "broken texture"), in which the surface is left rough, with visible chisel marks, and shinogi awase ("ridges joined together"), which describes the meeting of two highly polished surfaces. Some of his works exhibit the contrast between the two techniques. His sculptures' clean lines often follow the subtle curvature of Japanese swords.{{cite web|title=Nagare Masayuki, "Stone Riddle"|url=http://artmuseum.princeton.edu/campus-art/objects/31575#zoom=17&lat=40.3505&lon=-74.6511|website=Princeton Campus Art|accessdate=25 May 2015}}{{cite web|title=Masayuki Nagare, "Sculpture: New to America"|url=http://www.jasonmccoyinc.com/ex_nagare07/ex_nagare07_frames.html|website=Jason McCoy Gallery|accessdate=25 May 2015}}
Nagare's works include Cloud Fortress, which survived the 9/11 attacks at the World Trade Center (New York City) but was destroyed in the rescue and recovery efforts,{{cite web|title=Artitechture: Lost Art of the World Trade Center|url=http://eclectix.com/loss-world-trade-center-art/|website=Eclectix|accessdate=25 May 2015}}{{cite news|last1=Killeen|first1=Michael|title=Penn's Blossoms, Samurai Sculptor, Blue Collars: 57th Street|url=https://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aEXvZxdlC1Ug|agency=Bloomberg.com|date=February 12, 2007}} Sakimori (Frontier Guardian) installed in the Honolulu Museum of Art, Hamaritsurin Garden in Seto Ohashi Commemorative Park (Kagawa Prefecture, Japan), Receiving (受 Ju) stored at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City,{{cite web|title=The Collection|url=http://www.moma.org/collection/works/80982?locale=es|website=www.moma.org|accessdate=23 July 2015}} and Transcendence (informally called The Banker's Heart by locals) installed in A.P. Giannini Plaza at 555 California Street (formerly the Bank of America building) in San Francisco, California. He died in July 2018 at the age of 95.[https://www.nikkei.com/article/DGXMZO33041420X10C18A7AC1000/ 彫刻家の流政之さん死去 NY貿易センター前に作品]
References
- Nagare, Masayuki, Masayuki Nagare, The life of a samurai artist, New York, Weatherhill, 1994.
Notes
{{Reflist|30em}}
External links
{{Commons category}}
- Nagare's [http://www.nagaremasayuki.com Official Website]
- Nagare's [http://nagarefound.jp/eng/masayuki biography] at Nagare Foundation, Japan
- Picture of Nagare's [http://www.japanese-arts.net/sculpture/nagare.htm World Trade Center plaza granite sculpture], lost after the attacks of 9/11
- Entries for Nagare at the [http://siris-artinventories.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?&uri=link=3100006~!210715~!3100001~!3100002&ri=2&source=~!siartinventories&term=Nagare%2C+Masayuki%2C+1923-+%2C+sculptor Inventories of American Painting and Sculpture], by Smithsonian American Art Museum
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Category:20th-century Japanese sculptors
Category:Imperial Japanese Navy personnel of World War II
Category:Japanese World War II pilots
Category:Japanese modern sculptors
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