Hewett Art
Blog
I will be having an exhibition at JR Nagoya Takashimaya from January 25 - 31, 2012.
Please come by if you are in Nagoya!
David
You are cordially invited to attend David Stanley Hewett’s Takashimaya 2011 Exhibition at the Takashimaya in Shinjuku from October 5-18. Hewett will be at the gallery to greet guests from 12-5PM on October 8,9,15 and 16. We look forward to seeing you there!
David Hewett will be available on October 8,9,15 and 16 at the gallery from 12-5PM to meet and discuss his art with guests.
David Stanley Hewett is one of the most well known foreign artists in Japan. His works can be seen in the permanent collections of the Imperial Hotel, The Okura Hotel, The Peninsula Hotel, Mitsui Trading and numerous other public and private collections around the world.
David Stanley Hewett first set foot on Japanese soil in 1988. His love for Japanese arts and culture motivated him to study Japanese ceramics, Japanese traditional painting, Obi design and most notably: the technique for making traditional Japanese folding screens. This art is rarely practiced anymore as most screens are now made with modern tools and materials.
As a former US Marine and a long-time practitioner of Japanese Karate, Hewett has always been fascinated with Japanese martial history and culture. The often referred to Samurai code of Bushido and the Japanese Shinto Religion have played significant roles in influencing Hewett’s work over the past decade.
Hewett’s consistently inconsistent use of a variety of materials keep his admirers guessing at what will be next. Hewett’s Nagano studio is akin to a laboratory with beakers and bottles, pigments of a multitude of colors and the smells of Nikawa, the gel that is extracted from deer skin to affix pigments to the paper, floating through the air.
Hewett’s use of gold and deep reds and blues are reminiscent of a visit to a Japanese shrine with their worn brass fittings and fading paintings on wood. Admirers of Hewett’s style find the work bold and calming at the same time and often remark that while apparently simple, the works continue to evolve, revealing over time a complexity and depth not apparent at first.
Since 1992 Hewett has held major exhibitions in Japan, The United States and Singapore. Hewett’s work will be featured at major exhibitions at Takashimaya Department Store in Shinjuku from October 5, 2011 and at Takashimaya in Nagoya from January 25, 2012. We are also looking forward to the release of his second Kimono Obi in October of 2011.
The ANA Intercontinental Hotel in Roppongi was kind enough to ask me
to do a three month Exhibition which began on the 30th of June. The exhibition
was arranged by Karen Thomas at Torizaka Art. There are 12 paintings. Some
canvases and some washi pieces. I hope you will have a chance to come by and have a look.
David
This is a Furosaki Screen I made while thinking about 12th century screens I saw
at the Idemitsu Museum last year. I wanted to create a screen that hinted at a
long ago beauty and powerful legacy without being too obvious. I used pure gold
leaf and Japanese pigments to paint the painting which I later washed away
with a sponge and sumi ink.
Hope you like it.
David
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