Interviews with Tanabe Chikuunsai IV

Japanese bamboo artist Tanabe Chikuunsai IV is one of Japan’s leading bamboo artists, the fourth artist in a lineage of bamboo basket makers from Sakai in Osaka prefecture. Like the generations before him, he weaves slender strips of bamboo into exquisite flower baskets and abstract sculptures, but he has also pushed the boundaries of basket weaving to create large-scale sculptures and installations.
Tanabe Chikuunsai IV is conscious of the life of the bamboo he uses in his work. The exhibition highlights the importance of conserving the bamboo forests, or chikurin, for future generations. As he weaves the bamboo strips, Chikuunsai reflects upon connections, or tsunagari, between humans and nature, present and past generations, and the cultures he brings together through his installations. When an exhibition closes, he dismantles each installation and saves the bamboo strips to use in his next work—creating a generational connection between his works, deliberately avoiding waste, and extending the bamboo’s life cycle.
Bamboo artist Tanabe Chikuunsai IV, together with his four apprentices ("deshi") created a 70-feet large-scale installation using 15,000 Japanese bamboo strips. Being the fourth in a lineage of bamboo artists, Chikuunsai continues the family tradition and technique of bamboo weaving in his artworks and installations, while passing down generations of knowledge to his apprentices.
Presented by JAPAN HOUSE Los Angeles Exhibition Production Tanabe Chikuunsai IV Chikuunsai IV Installation Assistants/Apprentices Nakamura Emika Hayashi Jumpei Ichikawa Yona Hamada Yoshiaki
Exhibition Photography and Video Minamoto Tadayuki and Hashiguchi Akiko
Exhibition Support provided by Yumekoubou TAI Modern Kanasaki Chikuzaiten Yamagishi Chikuzaiten
Media