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Saturday, November 22, 2025 |
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| Tamiko Kawata unveils monumental safety-pin installation at Alison Bradley Projects |
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Together II transforms collective labor into collective meaning. The installation foregrounds the generative power of organizing and mutual care in a time of fragmentation and uncertainty.
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NEW YORK, NY.- Alison Bradley Projects is presenting Together Too, Tamiko Kawatas second exhibition with the gallery. Spanning six decades of creative inquiry, the exhibition brings together works on paper, sculptures, and a new site-specific installation.
At the core of the exhibition is Kawatas largest work to date, Together II: Waterfall, a monumental installation comprising approximately 216,600 safety pins arranged in sweeping silver waves that inundate the gallery walls. Created in collaboration with Alison Bradley Projects, the installation emerged through a series of public workshops, where over 120 participants joined Kawata to assemble chains of interlinked pins. The collective processrepetitive, tactile, and meditativeembodies the works themes of labor, unity and mutual care.
To encounter Kawatas work is to engage directly with her biography. Her intimate practice excavates the intersections of Japanese and American identities, particularly the material particularities of her diasporic experience. Kawata first began using safety pins, not commonly used in Japan, to adapt to American clothing sizes, which were often too long for her. Beginning with a safety pin wearable art collectionwhich was written up in the New York Times in 1973the artist began weaving them into metal sculptures in 1978.
As a sculptor, Kawata harnesses the safety pins interlocking, additive energy to create delicate chains, sprawling meshes, gridded weavings, and undulating sculptural forms. Skillfully experimenting with the textural qualities of metal and thoughtfully timed exposure to the elements, Kawata achieves a range of tones, from a pristine nickel to a golden tarnish to a rich rust. The prosaic safety pin stands as an emblem of womens labor, namely in the hemming of clothes and work with textile, craft, childcare. In the artists sculptural work, they become a clever response to adjacent movements and practices: they nod to Ruth Asawas organic looped-wire sculptures while also complicating the minimalist grids of Agnes Martin and Sol LeWitt.
Fashioned by many hands with many stories, Together II is both a political gesture and a social meditation on what connects us and divides us. Tamiko Kawata: Together Too demonstrates not only Kawatas decades-long investigation into her chosen medium, the safety pin, but also invites the viewer to consider its multiplicity not only as a humble fastener but as a medium of relationality and connectivity.
Born in Kobe in 1936, Tamiko Kawata came of age in post-war Japan. As such, a persistent defiance of traditional gender roles and class hierarchies became core to both her personal and professional mission. Kawata studied Sculpture at the University of Tsukuba / Tokyo University of Education, where she embraced Bauhaus design principles and the avant-garde aesthetic philosophies of Dada and Bauhaus, breaking free from the dominant École de Paris curricula popular in Japan at the time. After graduating in 1959, Kawata worked as an artist-designer with Kagami Crystal Glass Works in Tokyo and, as the companys first woman designer, earned the second highest salary in the nation, and the highest national womens salary at age 23. In 1961, satisfied with her glass work and seeking to escape the prevailing expectations of marriage, Kawata immigrated to the United States, settling in New York City in 1962 where she continues to live and work. Once there, built a successful professional life as a designer, producing jewelry and modernist home objects with an acute awareness of material properties. She attended the classes of Adda-Husted Andersen, a Danish silversmith, at the Craft Student League of YWCA. Soon after, Kawata later took her place in a teaching position there for metal fabrication and small sculpture classes from 1979 until they closed the facilities in 2005. After the Craft Students League, Kawata taught at 92nd Street Y until 2015 when her husband's Lewy Body dementia progressed.
Kawata's work has been the subject of many solo and group exhibitions. Key institutional holdings include Honolulu Contemporary Art Museum (Honolulu, Hawaii), Lafcadio Hearn/Yakumo Koizumi Art Museum (Matsue, Japan), Museum for Arts & Design/MAD Museum (New York, NY), Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (Montreal, Canada), LongHouse Reserve Permanent Collection, (East Hampton, NY), and PREC Institute (Tokyo, Japan) among others.
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Today's News
November 22, 2025
Sotheby's shatters records with $304.6M evening led by Van Gogh and Frida Kahlo
Rare juvenile Triceratops skull, over 70% intact, goes to auction at Gros & Delettrez
Spreading Growth: Mapping the Slow Mutations of Trauma Across Body, Technology, and Time
Van Gogh Museum acquires two remarkable pastels
Montreal Museum of Fine Arts debuts major Inuit art presentation in newly renovated galleries
'Superman' No. 1 leaps to $9.12 million at Heritage, becomes most expensive comic ever sold
Fahey/Klein Gallery presents 'Tableaux,' Julia Fullerton-Batten's cinematic new exhibition
Todd Hido merges fiction and memory in atmospheric new exhibition at Reflex Amsterdam
Stacey Masson appointed Director of Marketing and Communications at The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts
Münchner Stadtmuseum opens exhibition revisiting Herbert List's postwar photographs of Munich
Charles Bell's Gum Ball I sets artist auction record in Heritage's $4.73 million Modern & Contemporary Art sale
Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen announces its 2026 program
AstaGuru presents rare and celebrated works of modern Indian artists at their upcoming auction
Tamiko Kawata unveils monumental safety-pin installation at Alison Bradley Projects
Maggi Hambling and Sarah Lucas reunite for dual exhibition
Cheryl Molnar explores nature, memory, and human impact in 'The Overview' at C24 Gallery
'Wonderscape' brings together Julien Calot's radiant paintings and Austyn Taylor's tender sculptures
Bienvenu Steinberg & C opens exhibition featuring Koo Bohnchang, Jane Yang D'Haene, and Peter Kim
Four UK artist-makers probe landscape, material, and memory
MCA Australia opens its major summer exhibition Data Dreams: Art and AI
Power Station of Art presents 15th Shanghai Biennale: Does the flower hear the bee?
The Huntington acquires rare Civil War painting
New exhibition at Kunstmuseum Ravensburg pairs Kathrin Sonntag with Gabriele Münter's early photographs
Peter Blum Gallery presents Su-Mei Tse's meditative exhibition 'This is (not) a love song'
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