Contemplating, Creation, Rebirth
Article/ The
Philadelphia Inquirer, newspaper, 3.18, 1990
The task that Hiroshi
Kariya has set for himself is daunting- to express through art the unity of all
people, places and things in the universe throughout the eons that the universe
has existed.
He has confronted this task for 13 years with the compulsive steadfastness of an Eastern mystic. Kariya's art is not concerned with object-making. It attempts to stimulate in the observer a higher consciousness akin to a state of grace, and if you sit with his work for a while, you begin to sense that this is far from an outstanding objective.
To recognize that objective, one needs at least a vague understanding of the philosophy of Kariya, who was born in Japan but who has lived in the United States since 1977. The best introduction to it is the wall text he has composed for his tripartite installation at the Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania, as part of the ICA's ongoing "Investigations" series.
The installation,
which will continue through April 25, is called Sutra: One Thing in
Everything, Everything in One Thing. The text, hand-printed on the wall in ink,
introduces the section that occupies the upper gallery. It reads as follows:
ABANDONED, BURIED,
BURNT, AND/OR LOST
In addition to the
work being shown, there exists, somewhere in this universe, the work that I
abandoned, buried, burned, and/or lost, which is not visible here.
In Japan, Sutra
writing is occasionally performed as a mass for the dead, a prayer for the
recovery of sickly person, or as a prayer for a wish to be granted.
The writers
sacrifice their spirit and time for the sake of fulfilling their true wish.
They commit themselves to spending a certain period of time while making an
endeavor toward a certain amount of work.
Sometimes a sutra
is made by means other than writing.
It may take the
form of a silent prayer or action that is consciously repeated to obtain what
is being focused upon.
Some works are buried underground- for that which is nayure's return to nature, the universal system. Another reason is a message for the future. It is their undeniable knowledge to resurface and be recalled.
Once every year,
usually at the beginning of the year, some of these writings are gathered and
burned to ashes of holiness. Thus, they receive a new beginning, a new life,
and are reborn. They celebrate the incessant resurrection of nature.
Hiroshi Kariya
1990
The key concepts in this passage are sutra and rebirth, the foundation of all three parts of Kariya's installation.
In Indian philosophy,
a Sutra (from the Sanskrit word for thread) is a compilation of rules or
principles that governs a particular aspect of life, For example, Kama sutra,
the one most familiar to Westerners, codifies the conventions of physical love.
Kariya adapts the concept as a group of words that conveys a fundamental idea
about the world in a way that transcends time and place.
The sutra underlying Kariya's work, which he has written on various objects thousands of times since 1977, is "is the now". To him, this inelegant phrase represents the immediacy of creation, and for him the act of creating is more important than the thing created.
Kariya also believes
that the material world is a continuum, that nothing is ever irrevocably
destroyed, that the present can speak to the future just as the past speaks to
the present, and that nature should be respected. Rebirth, which the
installation expresses more prosaically as recycling, is a concept to be
honored and encouraged.
For Kariya, the
installation represents a prolonged act of meditation on immortality. It is a
contemplative work constructed with humble materials such as rocks, beans and
driftwood, which have been energized through repetitive sutra inscriptions in
ink and paint.
The easiest part of
the installation for an observer to grasp is Memory Wall, which occupies the
west wall of the lower gallery. Memory Wall expresses the idea of rebirth literally; It's constructed of the framing lumber and sheetrock that were used for the previous installation in the gallery, by Russian artist Ilya Kabakov.
Memory: Ilya Kabakov's Wall (Progress photo album)
Kabakov's installation consisted of a sheetrock wall that covered the south end of the lower gallery and a free-standing U-shaped wall in the center of the room. Kariya demolished these walls, but before he did, he sectioned them 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 with chalklines into grids and marked with an identifying letter and number, much as archaeologists mark out a dig site.
Memory : Archaeologist's Marking (For The Future)
Kariya then assembled
some of the larger chunks of the demolished Kabakov walls into a new, irregular
wall. The leftover framing lumber is neatly stacked at the side, each piece
numbered, and the debris, including even the dust from the demolition, is heaped
behind it.
Memory Tomb: Kabakov's Wall Fragment
Simple as it is,
Memory Wall embodies the idea of reincarnation with surprising eloquence. Its
post-Kabakov codings testify to its former existence, and its deliberately
ragged appearance reminds the observer that it honors the spirit of
reincarnation more than material perfection.
Memory: wooden fragment #26
(This fragment was revealed after demolition, used for Andy Wahol's previous exhibition)
But it does have a
practical aspect. Kariya has stamped and numbered 800 small pieces of sheetrock
that the ICA will sell for a dollar each, with the proceeds to be used to
recoup the cost of the Kbakov walls.
On the opposite wall
of the lower gallery, Kariya has installed a work-in-progress called 8000
Years Spring, 8000 Years Autumn.
Forty-eight feet long by 8 feet high, it is made of pieces of used wood,
each 2 feet long.
The pieces are stacked on the wall in six rows. The stacks vary in height, and most of the wood is tinted green (for spring) or red and purple (for autumn). Most also are marked with a simulated script that represents Kariya's "is the now" sutra.
The sutra writing
also covers a series of large scrolls open to various lengths on the floor in
front of the wall.
8,000 Years Autumn, 8,000 Years Spring
The visual effect of
the wall array is something like an abstract codex or calendar. One recognizes
it as a record of time passed, but it also alludes to the rhythmic cadence of
language. Because sutra writing is abstract-it vaguely resembles Arabic or
Persian-it communicates metaphorically, but its incantatory purpose is clear.
...The most
ritualistic aspect of the total installation, Sutra Tomb, occupies the upper
gallery. Here, Kariya displays a panoply of sutra objects-wooden discs (on
which his sutra is written continuously in a spiral), pieces of driftwood,
rocks, small jars of paint, and miscellaneous objects such as candles,
seashells, postcards, bones and small paper scrolls.
Sutra Tomb
Some of these items are organized systematically on a sturdy, wooden free-standing shelf, while others are laid out on the floor behind it. The observer isn't allowed to walk around or through the piece, so he or she experiences it as a succession of fragmented views.
To the left, a 20-foot-wide ring of 100 limestone fragments, each covered with sutra writing, circles through an adjacent gallery and links up with the central array; to the right, a ring of 100 piles of white beans, totaling about 100, a "grasp"
100 Stone Sutra
The arrangement does
approximate an ancient burial chamber, where offerings are left to propitiate
gods, but through the seeds it also implies dormancy and rebirth. Like 8000
Years, through, it cannot be deciphered by an outsider, nor do I think the
artist intends that anyone should need to do so.
Literal translation isn't necessary; the spirit of the work is palpable from its form and constituent elements. If one were to come upon a similar display deep in a primeval forest or in a secluded mountain cave, as an artifact of a vanished civilization, one would understand its purpose intuitively.
The most distinctive quality of Kariya's work, aside from the patience and dedication it obviously demands, is that the process of making it-the "sacrifice" to which he refers in his wall text-is more consequential than the artifacts it produces. It is, in fact, its essence.
Piling 54 Stones: Begins and Ends
By coming upon this installation after the artist has completed his labor (or at least interrupted it), the observer unfortunately misses the main event, which is the artist focusing intently on his task. This art isn't intended as interpersonal communication; it describes a solitary, almost penitential search for communion with a cosmic unity.
One judges the quality of such a quest much as one would evaluate a religious mission, by the artist's persistence and dedication to his ideals. By this standard, Kariya has achieved the most meaningful goal to which art can aspire.
Edward J. Sozanski,
Philadelphia Inquirer, 3.18, 1990
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