Sone works in various media and is primarily known for his sculpture - including marble and crystal carving and installations - but he also paints, creates performance art, and creates films.
Yutaka
Sone works in a variety of media, with an emphasis on sculpture.
Not exact matches
Other than Emma
Sone in «La La Land,» it was mostly a shock that Amy Adams did not receive a nod for her superb
work as a translator in «Arrival.»
His
work has been published in numerous national and international publications including Rolling
Sone, Mens Journal, and The Surfers Journal to name a few.
The show will feature
work from Barbara Bloom, Jan Fabre, Jaime Hayon, Luke Jerram, Michael Joo, Marya Kazoun, Marta Klonowska, Tomas Libertiny, Alessandro Mendini, Mike and Doug Starn, Vik Muniz, Tony Oursler, Javier Perez, Jaume Plensa, Silvano Rubino, Thomas Schutte, Joyce Scott, Kiki Smith, Yutaka
Sone, Patricia Urquiola and Ursula von Rydingsvard.
Yutaka
Sone's
work defies easy categorization.
Although
Sone has lived his entire life in Japan, primarily Tokyo, his
work does not exploit his heritage.
Not only can it not be reduced to a single medium —
Sone's
work encompasses sculpture; drawings; performance; and video — it is also difficult to locate culturally.
The exhibition includes plastic on canvas
works by Michael Assiff, counterfeit children's art by Brian Belott, ceramics by Karin Gulbran and Paul Swenbeck, metal sculpture by Yutaka
Sone, and more.
Sone has exhibited his
work throughout Asia, including solo exhibitions at the Art Tower Mito, Mito, Japan (1993); Roesntgen Kunst Institute, Tokyo, Japan (1995); Mitaka City Arts Foundation, Japan (1996); Hiroshima Contemporary Art Museum, Japan (1997); Shiseido Art House, Kakegawa, Japan (1998); AARA, Bangkok, Thailand (1998); and Sogestu Art Museum, Tokyo, Japan (1999).
Sone has exhibited his
work throughout AsiaRead more
Live and silent auctions, coordinated by Paddle8, will include
work from John Baldessari, Larry Bell, Tara Donovan, Sam Falls, Loie Hollowell, Rashid Johnson, Paul McCarthy, Ed Ruscha, Yutaka
Sone, Leo Villareal, and Mary Weatherford, with more to be announced.
SIZE MATTERS Baby Banana Tree, 2007 - 08 Whenever
Sone creates a
work, it is in search of «landscapes that people, including artists, will never know, can never dominate, and never reach,» he has stated.
Playing with the relationship between photography and documentation, and merging realism with elements of abstraction, these photographs get to the heart of
Sone's
work — forcing us to consider anew the world around us, which all too often we take for granted.
Delivered on pallets, this «raw material» is assembled on - site by Murillo, El - Sayegh, and
Sone, as they continue to
work with the printed sheets.
December 22, 2017 - February 6, 2018 featuring
works by Josef Albers, Enrico Castellani, Lovis Corinth, Lucio Fontana, Gotthard Graubner, Leiko Ikemura, Raúl Illarramendi, Jannis Kounellis, Catherine Lee, Piero Manzoni, Claire Morgan, Gideon Rubin, Georgia Russell, Joel Shapiro, Qiu Shihua, David Smith, Yutaka
Sone, Pierre Soulages, Cy Twombly
Concurrent solo exhibitions in Tokyo at Maison Hermès and Tokyo Opera City Art Gallery, respectively, are allowing Japanese viewers the chance to appreciate both bodies of marble and crystal
work, as well as other aspects of
Sone's practice including paintings, drawings and early videos.
The show includes a tropical, jungle-esque curation of
works from artists such as Paul Swenbeck, Katherine Bernhardt, Misaki Kawai, Yutaka
Sone and Nicolas Party.
Sone's
work was the subject of two solo exhibitions in Tokyo: Perfect Moment at the Tokyo Opera City Art Gallery in 2011 and Snow at the Maison Hermès Le Forum in 2010.
In 2013, a two - person exhibition of
work done in collaboration by
Sone and Benjamin Weissman was presented at the Santa Monica Museum of Art in California.
A number of artists living and
working here have interesting professional relationships outside of L.A., such as Alex Olson, Yutaka
Sone, Mark Bradford, Brenna Youngblood, Sharon Lockhart and Kerry Tribe.
Sone does not exploit the heritage of one particular culture through his
work, but instead draws on his extensive travels as he strives to create a singular poetic vocabulary connected to culture at large.
Yutaka
Sone (曽根 裕,
Sone Yutaka, born 1965 in Shizuoka, Japan) is a contemporary artist who lives and
works in Los Angeles.
Some of
Sone's sculptural
works include cities or sceneries carved into large blocks of marble, and oversized snowflakes carved out of single pieces of natural crystal.
Like Looking for Snow Leopard at the Kunsthalle Bern presented
Sone's personal assessment of landscape and displayed a new version of his large installation It Seems Like Snow Leopard Island (2002 - 2006), alongside related snowflake sculptures, paintings, drawings, and video
work.
Yutaka
Sone's
work was shown in a number of group exhibitions in the United States and abroad, including Glasstress 2011 in Venice, BadLands at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporar Art, the Whitney Biennial 2004, the Sao Paulo Biennial 2003, and the Istanbul Biennial 2001.
Yutaka
Sone was born in 1965 in Shizuoka, Japan and lives and
works in Los Angeles.
Together with the two other institutions involved in this series of exhibitions, i.e. the Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago and the Aspen Art Museum, the Kunsthalle Bern will publish a book on
Sone's
work with texts Philippe Pirotte, Hanna Schouwink, Hamza Walker, Benjamin Weissman and Heidi Zuckermann Jacobson.
Sone's love of snow and ski - ing, has brought him to his latest
works, a series of snowflakes carved out of single pieces of natural crystal or marble.
Sone's
work has been widely exhibited internationally.
Most of
Sone's
work is produced in his studio in Xiamen, where he
works together with a team of Chinese craftsmen in a family - run a stone factory.
A selection of
works by Yutaka
Sone will also be on view.
The Stedelijk Museum presents a substantial selection of
works in four gallery spaces, revealing the diversity of the gift, which includes
work by artists such as Atelier Van Lieshout, Yutaka
Sone and Eric Wesley.
Sone, who now lives and
works mainly in Los Angeles and Xiamen, has travelled extensively.
Artists such as Yutaka
Sone, Peter Doig, Karen Kilimnik, Jim Hodges, Carla Klein, Mamma Andersson and Mark Wallinger created
works and discuss their projects in this catalogue.
The snow leopard is one of the most elusive motifs to pervade Yutaka
Sone's
works; like his own peripatetic artistic practice, snow leopards (a protected species) seem to be everywhere, yet leave no trace of their movements.
«We were watching the same landscape and started painting together what we saw,» says
Sone, who
works side by side with Weissman on the same canvas as they try to crystallize their experience at the end of a day of skiing.
He comes to house to take our
sone to Judo and to watch him while i am
work at nights.