Artist Creates (And Destroys) Drawings From Thousands of Pounds of Salt
GIZMODO
By Kelsey Campbell-Dollaghan
CALIFORNIA---There are plenty of artists who have spent the majority of their careers devoted to a single unlikely medium: For James Turrell, it’s light. For El Anatsui, it’s soda tabs. But for Motoi Yamamoto, a 47-year-old Japanese artist whose two latest shows recently opened recently at Mint Museum and the Monterey Museum of Art, it’s table salt. Yamamoto’s work borrows from traditional Hindu and Buddhist meditation mandalas—which are created as a form of meditation and swept away shortly after completion—and they have an incredibly short shelf life. [link]
By Kelsey Campbell-Dollaghan
CALIFORNIA---There are plenty of artists who have spent the majority of their careers devoted to a single unlikely medium: For James Turrell, it’s light. For El Anatsui, it’s soda tabs. But for Motoi Yamamoto, a 47-year-old Japanese artist whose two latest shows recently opened recently at Mint Museum and the Monterey Museum of Art, it’s table salt. Yamamoto’s work borrows from traditional Hindu and Buddhist meditation mandalas—which are created as a form of meditation and swept away shortly after completion—and they have an incredibly short shelf life. [link]
