Tomoyo
Ihaya: Drawing Water
June 17 to September 10, 2006
Vancouver-based
artist Tomoyo Ihaya produces prints, drawings and
installations
inspired by the artist's experiences of the interconnectedness of the
material and spiritual worlds. In recent work, Ihaya has explored the
symbolic and physical importance of water. For her new installations in
the Reynolds Gallery and Rotary Courtyard, the artist will create work
inspired by her recent experience of living with a Buddhist family in
Ladakh, India, where water was pumped from a well daily for drinking,
cooking and washing.
In
Ladakh I felt that water, especially drinking water, was precious because
it did not flow conveniently from a tap. It comes from deep in the earth
and is laboriously collected in plastic containers and then stored in a
plastic bin. The repetition of the chore of collecting water started to
feel like a ritual and even the ordinary, plastic containers took on a
sacred beauty for me.
Tomoyo
Ihaya was born in Tsu-City, Mie, Japan. She studied fine arts at Mount
Allison University in New Brunswick and the Emily Carr Institute of Art
and Design. She received a B.A. in German Literature from Rikkyo
University in Japan in 1994 and an M.F.A. in printmaking from the
University of Alberta in Edmonton in 2002. Tomoyo Ihaya has exhibited her
work in solo and group exhibitions for over 10 years across Canada and in
the United States, Australia, Japan and Europe, and has participated in
artist-in-residence programs in Thailand, the United States and India.
Drawing
Water is the first solo exhibition of Tomoyo Ihaya's work at the
Kelowna Art Gallery.