Mother and Child of Bedouin, Nomadic People (Jordan)
Bhutan’s Paro Tshechu Festival
Afternoon in Kashgar
Nemrut Dau (East Turkey)
In the Old Town of Hotan at the Takiamakan Desert
Radak Hemis Festival
Pamir National Park
Blue Poppies in Siguniang Mountain, China
Road to the Hachette Mosque in Yemen
The Gate of Yemen
Children Watching Dance Thai Ethnic Performance (Luiri, a town on the border with Myanmar)
In the Shade of a Tree: Yunnan's Native Ethnic Minorities
Wind from thte Meadow: Mogolia
Palmyra
Galungan, The day of Balinese festival
People in the Rub Ali Hari Desert (Yemen)
Gyalthang, Lake Shudo
Yunnan's Jingpo Celebrate Munao Zhongge Festival
Popular Trees Lines on the Road, Kashgar
A Hill Overlooking the Ancient Parthenon
The silk road, which has an exotic sound and stirs up eternal romance, carried many cultures and art from east and west along with silk between the 2nd and 18th centuries BC. Because of its historical value, a part of the Silk Road was registered as a World Heritage Site in 2014 as a " Silk Roads: the Routes Network of Chang'an-Tianshan Corridor," and now it is a cultural heritage for fusion, exchange, and humanity.
Kazuko Irie was born in 1916 in Yamaguchi Prefecture as the daughter of a merchant. She spent her childhood in Daegu, Korea, and contrary to her family's wishes, attended Joshibi University of Art and Design (Women's Academy of Fine Arts) in Tokyo. After graduating, she returned to Daegu before going to sell her art at the gallery in Harbin. It was then that she witnessed the sunset over the Nen River that changed her life.
Since 1969, she has visited more than 30 countries along the Silk Road. Starting from Istanbul with her sketchbooks, watercolor pencils, and pastels, she painted images to preserve her impressions of the scenery that she saw as she traveled. In Dawn in Istanbul, Turkey, she captured the sensation of the burning red sunset from her hotel room over Bosporus strait, which reminded her of the sunset she had seen in Harbin.
In this exhibition, we will introduce approximately forty pieces of work by the 105-year-old artist Kazuko Irie. These pieces were inspired by the majestic landscapes, people, and lifestyles she encountered while traveling along the Silk Road. She imbues the colors in her work with the feelings from her travels. The exhibition looks back over Kazuko Irie's career, which spans 85 years.
Ms. Kazuko Irie passed away on August 10, 2021, at a hospital in Tokyo. She was 105 years old. We would like to express our sincere condolences.
Organized by The Nippon Club
Supported by the J.C.C. Fund
(Philanthropic Fund of Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry in New York)
In cooperation with IRIE KAZUKO Silk Road Museum
KOA Corporation
OKAYA Silk Museum
"Silk: Then, Now and Beyond" Film Organizing Committee
Curator: Shoko Hayashi