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Toshio Odate

American sculptor and woodworker From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Toshio Odate (Japanese: 大館 敏夫,[1] born 1930) is a Japanese-born American sculptor, woodworker, craftsman, author, and educator.[2] He specializes in Japanese woodworking and is a noted shoji maker.[3][4] He is the author of, Japanese Woodworking Tools: Their Tradition, Spirit and Use (Taunton Press, 1984).

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Biography

Toshio Odate was born in 1930 in Tokyo, Japan.[5] He trained in Japan as a cabinetmaker early in his career for 7 years starting at age 16, this was due to the economic pressure in Japan post-World War II.[6][7] In 1948, he moved to the United States for one year for college, followed by a year in Denmark for study of Scandinavian design.[6] He was planning to return to Japan to teach, however he changed his mind and Odate then decided to return to the United States, to live in New York City.[6] In 1973, he moved to Woodbury, Connecticut.[6]

He taught sculpture classes at Cooper Union briefly, followed by teaching at State University of New York at Purchase, Brooklyn Museum Art School, and Pratt Institute.[6] At Brookfield Craft Center, Odate taught shoji-making classes.[4]

His work is included in the public collection at UCR Arts,[8] Memorial Art Gallery,[9] Chazen Museum of Art,[10] and Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden.[11] Odate is included in the Brooklyn Museum Interviews of Artists, 1965–1968,[12] and the Stephen Radich Gallery Records, 1942–1979,[13] at the Archives of American Art.

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Publications

  • Odate, Toshio (1984). Japanese Woodworking Tools: Their Tradition, Spirit and Use. Woodworker's Library. Newtown, Connecticut: Taunton Press. ISBN 9780918804198.
  • Ōdate, Toshio (2000). Making Shoji. Fresno, California: Linden Publishing. ISBN 9780941936477.

References

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