JB Blunk
Past exhibition
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Kasmin is delighted to announce its first exhibition of work by American sculptor JB Blunk (1926–2002), on view from October 8, 2020, at 297 Tenth Avenue. Working primarily in wood and ceramic, Blunk developed a distinct style that drew upon the Japanese principle of directness as well as an unfaltering reverence for the natural world, particularly his interest in ecology and primordial landscapes. Taking forms from antiquity and mysticism and translating them instinctively through raw, salvaged materials, Blunk produced a body of work that represents an innate expression of, and conversation with, nature. The exhibition is staged in collaboration with the JB Blunk Collection and includes nearly fifty works in ceramic, wood, and stone by the artist.
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From 1950, Blunk spent four formative years in Japan undertaking apprenticeships with master Japanese ceramicists Rosanjin Kitaoji and Toyo Kaneshige who instructed him in the power of the elemental—earth, water, and fire—that would become fundamental to the character of his own work. He took these principles back to the US in 1954, settling off-grid in Inverness, CA (he returned to CA from Japan in 1954 but settled in Inverness in 1958). Here the artist built and furnished a home and studio for his family on an acre of land gifted from his friend and patron, the surrealist painter Gordon Onslow Ford. Producing both the structure and contents of the home single-handedly (wooden furniture as well as the ceramics used daily for eating and drinking), Blunk considered it to be his masterpiece.
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The project demonstrates Blunk’s disregard for category in art-making, producing work that exists as a riposte to any claim of sensible distinction between sculpture that makes a utilitarian statement and that which is abstract. It was also the catalyst for the artist’s turn towards wood as his primary medium, after which he often foraged trunks and rare burls from felled trees found on nearby beaches. On Blunk’s use of reclaimed Redwoods, his lifelong mentor, the Japanese designer Isamu Noguchi, remarked, “JB does them honor in carving them as he does, finding true art in the working, allowing their ponderous bulk, waking them from their long sleep to become part of our own life and times, sharing with us the afterglow of a land that was once here.” Blunk was a pioneer of the 1960s “back-to-the-land” movement and one of the first artists to be described as a “California Craftsman.”
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JB Blunk’s work has been exhibited internationally in Japan, Washington D.C., Los Angeles and San Francisco. Recent exhibitions include a solo exhibition at Blum & Poe in Tokyo in 2016 and Kate MacGarry, London, 2018. His work is included in the collections of the Oakland Museum of California, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, M+, Museum of Arts and Design, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and numerous private collections.
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Works
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About the Artist
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Explore
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Ian Davenport: Tides
October 30 – December 20, 2024 509 West 27th Street, New YorkIan Davenport’s latest works expand his series of poured acrylic paintings that spill across the gallery floor, employing the signature technique that defined the artist’s recent architectural interventions across Europe, namely in the Giardini at the 57th Venice Biennale (2017) and at the Chiostro del Bramante in Rome (2022-23). The exhibition also introduces metallic paint into Davenport’s artistic vocabulary, deepening the artist’s engagement with the colors and materials of Italian Renaissance painting. -
Elliott Puckette: Unfolding
October 30 – December 20, 2024 297 Tenth Avenue, New YorkThe artist's eleventh solo exhibition at the gallery features a suite of new paintings and bronze sculptures that expand upon the artist’s signature visual exploration of the line as a formal device to realize her atmospheric abstractions. -
Julie Hamisky: Transference
October 30 – November 23, 2024 514 West 28th Street, New YorkImmortalizing the most intricate details of the natural world, Julie Hamisky continues to garner international recognition for her rigorous electroplating technique that belies the ephemeral forces of nature. In freestanding sculptures, mirrors, chandeliers, and fine jewelry, Hamisky’s transformative approach to casting organic matter preserves fleeting moments in time.
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