This sculpture depicts a bird with elongated legs. Upon closer inspection, it reveals an uncanny form with three legs and two heads. This enigmatic appearance activates the viewer’s imagination. The work is formed from thin, plate-like components assembled into a complex structure. While the original model was made by cutting and assembling slate, this version was produced by casting each component and assembling them in bronze. The method of cutting flat planes and joining them together echoes the principles of traditional Japanese wooden joinery. Isamu Noguchi, one of the foremost sculptors of the twentieth century, was born to Japanese poet Noguchi Yonejirō and American writer Léonie Gilmour. In his later years, he established a studio in Mure-chō, Kagawa Prefecture (present-day Takamatsu City).
Description
This sculpture depicts a bird with elongated legs. Upon closer inspection, it reveals an uncanny form with three legs and two heads. This enigmatic appearance activates the viewer’s imagination. The work is formed from thin, plate-like components assembled into a complex structure. While the original model was made by cutting and assembling slate, this version was produced by casting each component and assembling them in bronze. The method of cutting flat planes and joining them together echoes the principles of traditional Japanese wooden joinery.
Isamu Noguchi, one of the foremost sculptors of the twentieth century, was born to Japanese poet Noguchi Yonejirō and American writer Léonie Gilmour. In his later years, he established a studio in Mure-chō, Kagawa Prefecture (present-day Takamatsu City).