Kazuo Kadonaga
Kazuo Kadonaga is a contemporary Japanese sculptor. He was born in 1946 in Ishikawa, Japan. From a family that owns a cedar forest and lumber mill.
Originally trained as a painter, Kadonaga soon realized that “others painted better”. In his father's sawmill he rediscovered the natural beauty of wood.
His work can be related to two recent art movements in Japan, though he was not directly involved with either. The Gutai, or “concrete” movement of the 1950s and, later, the Mono-ha or “object” group which operates in a way similar to Western “process artists”.
Wood
Kadonaga's earliest works that gained him international attention were made with a veneer slicer to cut cedar logs with the bark removed into long strips the thickness of paper. The strips were then glued back together in the form of the original log.As well as slicing logs, Kadonaga has also carved geometric shapes, and split logs to reveal the grain.
Wood is Kadonaga's most extensively used material, which he uses to “explore different ways of looking at a tree, not to take a tree for granted”
Silk
In his silk pieces, Kadonaga builds wooden grids from pine or cedar wood. He then releases on them silkworms that have been fed and readied for making cocoons. The worms then explore the structures Kadonaga made for them, and settle in the different crannies throughout.Because worms tend to bunch toward the top, and left the bottom of the structures untouched, Kadonaga has previously spent 48 hours periodically turning the grids while the worms roam, tricking them into settling in a more even distribution. The final result was niches filled with the round silkworm cocoons as well as threads of silk left along the frame.