![Ikuko Iwamoto, Wild One, 2018](https://artlogic-res.cloudinary.com/w_1600,h_1600,c_limit,f_auto,fl_lossy,q_auto/artlogicstorage/cavalierofinn/images/view/63da847ba38598e32a17d47f1ab98039j/cavalierofinngalleryltd-ikuko-iwamoto-wild-one-2018.jpg)
![Ikuko Iwamoto, Wild One, 2018](https://artlogic-res.cloudinary.com/w_1600,h_1600,c_limit,f_auto,fl_lossy,q_auto/artlogicstorage/cavalierofinn/images/view/e9bb3df0799fa137b458f3c322818e13j/cavalierofinngalleryltd-ikuko-iwamoto-wild-one-2018.jpg)
![Ikuko Iwamoto, Wild One, 2018](https://artlogic-res.cloudinary.com/w_1600,h_1600,c_limit,f_auto,fl_lossy,q_auto/artlogicstorage/cavalierofinn/images/view/1066ee889771a462b50ed8eb3065aa66j/cavalierofinngalleryltd-ikuko-iwamoto-wild-one-2018.jpg)
Ikuko Iwamoto
Wild One, 2018
Porcelain and White Frame
One of thirty
25 x 25cm
Series: Framed Limited Edition
Signed on front
CF0055
Photo: Ikuko Iwamoto
Currency:
Further images
Ikuko’s work is inspired largely by her own curiosity of the microscopic world – the cells, genes and organic forms that are invisible to the naked eye. Her meticulous attention...
Ikuko’s work is inspired largely by her own curiosity of the microscopic world – the cells, genes and organic forms that are invisible to the naked eye. Her meticulous attention to detail and adept technical skills enable her to uniquely interpret the world that inspires her, creating ceramic sculptures which take their reference from the tiniest of sea creatures to the minutest of micro-organisms.
Over the years Cavaliero Finn has seen Ikuko’s work and confidence grow and while the tabletop ceramic works she makes are still very popular, we have really enjoyed the development of Ikuko’s sculptural pieces. It's a development that had been dormant for several years from when she was at Tezukayama College in Japan, Ikuko’s freestanding sculptural forms have been translated into boxed frames making them more two-dimensional and thrusting them firmly into the realms of fine art, a progression that won her the Young Masters Maylis Grand Ceramic Prize in 2019.
Speaking of Ikuko’s work at the Young Masters Art Prize exhibition, curator and art historian Stephen Feeke said:
“It’s just totally original, with a reference to art history in a very interesting way, it’s surrealism, [referencing] people like Cornell, and yet it feels utterly, utterly, original in its use of ceramic and its use of mixed media.”
Over the years Cavaliero Finn has seen Ikuko’s work and confidence grow and while the tabletop ceramic works she makes are still very popular, we have really enjoyed the development of Ikuko’s sculptural pieces. It's a development that had been dormant for several years from when she was at Tezukayama College in Japan, Ikuko’s freestanding sculptural forms have been translated into boxed frames making them more two-dimensional and thrusting them firmly into the realms of fine art, a progression that won her the Young Masters Maylis Grand Ceramic Prize in 2019.
Speaking of Ikuko’s work at the Young Masters Art Prize exhibition, curator and art historian Stephen Feeke said:
“It’s just totally original, with a reference to art history in a very interesting way, it’s surrealism, [referencing] people like Cornell, and yet it feels utterly, utterly, original in its use of ceramic and its use of mixed media.”