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Gakuyō Guinomi

Shingu Sayaka

Artwork Details

Gakuyō Guinomi
1979-2024
Shingu Sayaka
ceramic
2 1/4 x 3 1/4 in. (5.72 x 8.25 cm);4 1/2 x 4 5/8 x 4 5/8 in. (11.43 x 11.75 x 11.75 cm)
Gift of Richard W. Anderson, Class of 1967
2024/2.55

On Display

Description

Shingu Sayaka 新宮さやか
Japan, born 1979
Gakuyō Guinomi ("Calyx" Sake Cup) (left)
Gakuyō Tokkuri ("Calyx" Sake Bottle) (right)
Reiwa era (2019–present)
2020s
Mixed clay with glaze slip
Gift of Richard Anderson, GO2024.9.7
and GO2024.9.37

Shingu Sayaka creates delicate vessels from thin shapes resembling
flower petals, a motif that suggests impermanence, ephemerality,
and fleeting beauty to the artist. To convey this meaning, she often
references a poem by the ninth-century legendary court beauty,
Ono no Komachi, in which she mourns the passing of time (→).
Shingu calls this vessel shape a calyx, which is a collection of
sepals that protect a flower in bud. Here, black pistils and stamens
peek out between the petals. As these vessels are meant for serving
and drinking Japanese rice wine, the user literally pours and
drinks from a flower cup.

The colors of flowers
Have all vanished from my sight
As I sit in vain
Looking at the rains
That sweep over my past life
(Translation by Janice Katz)

Displayed alongside matching Gakuyō Tokkuri ("Calyx" Sake Bottle)
(Japanese Gallery Rotation, Summer 2025)

Physical Description:

A delicate cup with a texture resembling petals; from a section on the side peek a stamen-like collection of black sticks. The exterior is gray with streaks of white and red, and the interior is washed with pale green. It is accompanied by a wooden box with purple ties and a blue cloth with a red stamp.

Usage Rights:

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