Kibe Seiho
Kibe Seiho

Kibe Seiho

ARTIST STATEMENT

It has been thirty years since I quit my job to attend Oita Prefectural Bamboo Craft and Training Center in Beppu. Things didn’t get any easier when I graduated; however, the sense of joy and hope arose every time I was able to complete a work of my own.

I weave finely stripped bamboo to express the ephemerality of nature and to convey my feeling and emotions. Simple forms, flowing lines, and calming colors are three elements I always keep in mind when I create.

The bamboo I like to use comes from thatched roofs of old farm houses in the area where I grew up. The bamboo is naturally smoked by hearths built into the floors.  The activities and lives of those who lived in these houses literally created the color of my baskets. The rich caramel color is the result of a cumulative effect of 100 years and more of human life. The color of susutake (smoked bamboo) is really a reflection of the lives of those who sat together around the irori (sunken hearth) in the middle of the floor during the cold winter days, warming food over the hearth, drinking a cup of tea together. When I place these old bamboo strips side by side and weave them, the memories of those people are integrated into my work.

In recent years, aligning straight elements in parallel fashion to create new forms became in vogue. I use age-old weaving techniques which were passed down from one generation to another and succeeded by many decades. I particularly like the chidori (plover) plaiting– each horizontal strip is supplemented by two extremely fine strips that undulate and cross one another as they zigzag above and below to create “x” patterns. The elegant pattern is so beautiful to me.

I hope the viewers find the beauty of bamboo in my works.