Unpainted cedar wood cabinet with handmade Japanese paper (washi), made by Masaru Kawai for the exhibition Juxtaposing Craft at the Museum at Far Eastern Antiquities 2022-2023. The Japanese name that Kawai has given the cabinet is kami dana (English: "divine shelf"), which is a form of miniature shrine and center for the daily worship of deities within the original Japanese religion of Shinto in, for example, a home.
The object both connects to older object types for altars in the home (which is a common place for these altars) and is innovative in the context, for example through the use of paper stretched on the wooden frame, but also in the overall shape of the cabinet.
The creator, Masaru Kawai (b. 1979), woodworker in Gifu, Japan, creates furniture based on his background in architecture and woodwork with education from, among others, the Department of Architecture, Faculty of Arts, Kyoto Seika University.
Kawai is the founder of the furniture company SOMA in an effort to reconnect people with the forest and has written about his philosophy in the catalog “SOMA. Forest to forest", published in 2019 in connection with Kawai's exhibition "SOMA: Japanese forests and the possibilities of untreated wood" at the Takenaka Carpentry tools museum, Nakayamate, Kobe. He works with wood from coniferous trees.
Masaru Kawai calls his company SOMA a lifestyle brand and is committed to using wood of local origin and "seeks to reveal the true value of trees and forests from a wide range of perspectives, through the curation of various workshops and guided forest walks", likes to collaborate with selected regions to improve forestry and works for "a culture in which we live together with the forest", deeply rooted in the unique Japanese geography. The name SOMA comes from soma as in somabito = a person who works in the mountains including, but not limited to, lumbermen and somashigoto = work in the mountains.
https://kawai-masaru.com/
https://www.kogeistandard.com/artist/masaru-kawai/
Type of acquisition:
Purchased from the maker Masaru Kawai in connection with the exhibition Juxtaposing Craft at the Museum at Far Eastern Antiquities where the cabinet was exhibited as a newly produced object for this exhibition. /PH