Annely Juda

Yoshishige Saito

10 Apr - 17 May 2008

© YOSHISHIGE SAITO
Continuation 3
1987
lacquer on wod, 3 parts
200 x 135 x 66 cm
YOSHISHIGE SAITO

Yoshishige Saito is recognised in his native Japan as one of the great abstract sculptors of the twentieth century.
Influenced by European and Russian art of the early 20th Century – especially the Russian Constructivists – he started to make plywood relief sculptures in the 1930s. In keeping with Constructivist principals he saw these works as “not a relationship between pictorial form and background” but existing as objects in their own right.

During the War many of his works were lost and destroyed but when the war was over and materials became more readily available again he started to incorporate large planks and discs of painted wood into his work. The results are great sculptural installations. In 1957 he won a prestigious “New Artist’s Prize” in Japan and this exposure helped towards his later inclusion in the Venice and Sao Paulo Biennales.

This exhibition includes 12 of the black painted sculptures he made in the 1980s and 90s including two of his very last works made at the age of 85. The gallery becomes a part of the work as the wooden forms jut and recede into space, overlapping and interrelating. Saito makes air and space a part of the work so that mass and volume are ambiguous. Through the use of wooden planks Saito was able to exploit the relationship between the material of construction and the suggestion of disintegration or collapse – themes that still have a particular resonance today.