Akiyama Yō 秋山陽
H21 × W49 × D25.5 cm
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Yō Akiyama (b. 1953) is a Kyoto-based Japanese ceramic artist and a key late figure of the avant-garde Sōdeisha group, which redefined ceramics as nonfunctional sculpture. He trained for six years under Kazuo Yagi, a founding member of Sōdeisha, and later taught at Kyoto Municipal University of Arts, becoming Professor Emeritus after retiring in 2018. Akiyama is known for large-scale, abstract works in black pottery—fired in low-temperature, smoky conditions—emphasizing texture, materiality, and form.
Born in Shimonoseki, Yamaguchi Prefecture, Akiyama comes from a third-generation artistic family. His early interest in clay emerged in the 1970s while working with children with intellectual disabilities. He studied ceramics at Kyoto City University of the Arts (1972–1978) under Yagi.
Akiyama’s work often involves massive forms, sometimes exceeding six meters and using tons of clay, alongside smaller sculptural vessels. His pieces are deliberately nonfunctional, rejecting traditional utilitarian pottery. He is particularly known for blackened surfaces and for using a gas burner to crack and transform clay. This technique, developed in the 1980s, began with experiments in heating clay spheres to create a hardened exterior and softer interior, allowing him to peel, fracture, and reshape surfaces into complex fissures and voids.
A central theme in his work is the tension between interior and exterior, evident in his “Metavoid” series. These works range from organic, nature-like forms to abstract compositions, often destabilizing expectations of material. The clay may resemble wood or metal before revealing its true nature.
Akiyama values clay’s responsiveness and embraces a process of both construction and destruction. He favors low-plasticity clay that retains marks of manipulation and avoids glaze to preserve raw material presence. Viewing himself as collaborating with clay, he allows the medium to influence outcomes. His work explores dualities such as creation and decay, continuity and rupture, and challenges conventional notions of ceramic form and function.