About Yukihiro Akama: Basho no Kankaku – A Sense of Place 場所の感覚
A display of 52 works, Basho no Kankaku – A Sense of Place 場所の感覚 will be Akama’s largest exhibition to date.
On display at YSP Centre is a new collection of beautiful, intricately carved wooden houses of various sizes – from just 4cm (slightly bigger than a 50p piece) up to 105cm – alongside a series of architectural technical drawings and mini prints. All works are for sale, with prices ranging from £110 to £7,950.
Working from a furniture maker’s workshop in Huddersfield, Akama is surrounded by the
natural world. There, he creates these singular houses, carving each one from a single
piece of wood. He draws on his experience as a joiner, through which he has refined his
skills and techniques in woodworking. Each piece is given a unique appearance and takes
between 3 hours and 3 days to complete. For this latest collection, commissioned by YSP, Akama has developed a method of colouring the wood using iron acetate solution.
The solution is painted onto the wood which reacts with the tannins to create a beautiful
ebonised finish.
The wood often dictates the starting point for the designs, with the knots or grain guiding
where Akama cuts and carves. Gradually they take on the appearance of a house – often
low and long, or tall with stilt-like legs and large roofs, sometimes cantilevered out. Delicate
and intricate detailing of clay render and pebbles minimally decorate and enhance the
surfaces, adding to the overall effect of how precarious man-made structures can be and
the now transient and perilous nature of so many people’s lives. Inspiration comes from
many sources for these fantastic creations, but much comes from Japanese temples and
shrines and particularly from Jomon-era ruins; the shapes, textures and surfaces used in
this period of 4,000 years ago.
Akama is an architectural technician by training, having studied architecture at Tohoku University of Art and Design, in Yamagata, Japan. When living in Japan, Akama designed a house for a plot of land he owned, rich in native Japanese trees with wild fruits and mushrooms. He aims to capture a sense of place in his work, creating houses that belong in woodland forest settings – quiet and rural. In 2011, he and his family moved to the UK, drawn to Yorkshire due to its landscape and natural surroundings. Here he has pursued an alternative lifestyle and career, responding to an overwhelming need to work with his hands as a maker. His first solo UK exhibition took place in 2013, and this is his second solo exhibition at YSP.
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