Keiko Mukaide

Keiko Mukaide (Japanese: 向出 圭子; born 1957 in Tokyo) is a Japanese artist who lives and works Fife on the Scottish coast.[1] She was an early winner of a Creative Scotland award and was shortlisted for the 1998 Jerwood Prize for glass.[2][3][4]

Education

Mukaide studied communication design at Musashino Art University in Tokyo, Japan, and received a master's degree in glass at the Royal College of Art in London.[2] She was awarded a research fellowship from the Edinburgh College of Art.

Artistic Style

Her art work employs a number of glass making techniques, casting and fusing glass in a kiln, manipulating glass in a blowing studio and gluing shards of dichroic glass to wire nets.[1]

Her recent work has been to produce large scale, site specific installations constructed from multiple small scale glass items, including "Memory of Place" funded by The Arts Council of England and Scottish Arts Council at York St. Mary's, Castlegate, York.[5]

In 2007, Mukaide collaborated with Si Applied Ltd. on Cutting Edge, a 90 m stainless steel sculpture in Sheaf Square, Sheffield, UK. The piece was commissioned by the Sheffield City Council as part of their "Heart of the City" project, a 10-year improvement of a pedestrian route in the city. Cutting Edge received the joint Marsh Award for Public Sculpture in 2008.[6]

Exhibitions and collections

Awards

  • Shortlisted for the 1998 Jerwood Applied Art Prize [2][7]

References

  1. "Keiko Mukaide Glass Installation". Tate Museum. 28 January 2006. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  2. "Keiko Mukaide". Fife Contemporary. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  3. "Looking glass KEIKO MUKAIDE AND CHIHO HITOMI". The Herald Scotland. 8 June 2005. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  4. Windsor, John (3 September 1998). "Design: The glass menagerie". Independent. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  5. Fairweather, Shona. "Keiko Mukaide". Aesthetica Magazine.
  6. "Si Applied Ltd (Chris Knight, Brett Payne and Keith Tyssen) with Keiko Mukaide 'Cutting Edge', 2007". Public Art in Sheffield. Public Art Research Archive, Sheffield Hallam University. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  7. "Design: Independent Competition in Conjunction With Liberty and Crafts". The Independent. 1998-09-10. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
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