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JB Blunk

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  • Biography
    View works. JB Blunk, Untitled, c. 1990
    Untitled, c. 1990
    View works
    Born in Ottawa, Kansas, 1926
    Died in Inverness, California, 2002
    Download Selected Press (PDF, opens in a new tab.)
    Download Artist CV (PDF, opens in a new tab.)
  • Working primarily in wood and ceramic, James Blain Blunk developed a distinct style that drew upon the Japanese principle of...

    JB Blunk in his studio in Inverness, California, c. 1968

    Working primarily in wood and ceramic, James Blain Blunk developed a distinct style that drew upon the Japanese principle of directness as well as an unfaltering reverence for the natural world, particularly ecology and primordial landscapes. Taking forms from antiquity and mysticism and translating them instinctively through raw, salvaged materials, Blunk produced a body of work that represents an innate expression of, and conversation with, nature.

    Blunk’s interest in Japanese ceramics was spurred by his studies under Laura Andreson at the University of California, Los Angeles. After graduation, he was drafted into the army and stationed in Korea, where a short training trip to Japan led to a chance encounter with the Japanese-American sculptor Isamu Noguchi. After his discharge from the army in 1952, and with Noguchi’s introduction, Blunk worked for four months in the Kamakura studio of the noted ceramicist Kitaoji Rosanjin. He then spent fourteen months in the Bizen workshop of Kaneshige Toyo. These apprenticeships offered Blunk firsthand exposure to Japan’s ancient unglazed ceramic tradition. Blunk’s instruction in the power of the elemental—earth, water, and fire—would become fundamental to the character of his own work. He took these principles back to California in 1954, settling in Inverness, fifty miles north of San Francisco, in 1956. There, between 1959 and 1962, the artist built and furnished a home and studio for his family on an acre of land gifted by his friend and patron, the surrealist painter Gordon Onslow Ford. Single-handedly producing both the structure and the contents of the home—the wooden furniture as well as the ceramics used daily for eating and drinking—Blunk considered it to be his masterpiece.

  • "Wood. Clay. Stone. Spirit. These are the elements from which JB Blunk created his work, and a more elemental artist of the postwar era would be hard to find. Blunk proceeded through sheer instinct and in deep conversation with nature; his art was the ultimate expression of a life lived off the grid." —Glenn Adamson
  • The project demonstrates Blunk’s disregard for category in art-making, producing work that exists as a riposte to any claim of... The project demonstrates Blunk’s disregard for category in art-making, producing work that exists as a riposte to any claim of... The project demonstrates Blunk’s disregard for category in art-making, producing work that exists as a riposte to any claim of...

    The project demonstrates Blunk’s disregard for category in art-making, producing work that exists as a riposte to any claim of sensible distinction between sculpture that makes a utilitarian statement and that which is abstract. It was also the catalyst for the artist’s turn towards wood as his primary medium, after which he often foraged trunks and rare burls from felled trees found on nearby beaches. In 1969, Blunk created The Planet, now on permanent view at the Oakland Museum of California, from a single redwood root structure. On Blunk’s use of reclaimed redwoods, Noguchi has noted, “JB does them honor in carving them as he does, finding true art in the working, allowing their ponderous bulk, waking them from their long sleep to become part of our own life and times, sharing with us the afterglow of a land that was once here.” Blunk was a pioneer of the 1960s back-to-the-land movement, and he was one of the first artists to be described as a California Craftsman.

    JB Blunk’s work has been exhibited widely in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Japan. In 2018, the Oakland Museum of California staged the retrospective JB Blunk: Nature, Art & Everyday Life. Also in 2018, the two-person exhibition In Conversation: Alma Allen & JB Blunk opened at the Palm Springs Art Museum before traveling to the Nevada Museum of Art in 2019. The first major monograph on the artist was published in 2020, with contributions by Lucy Lippard, Glenn Adamson, Fariba Bogzaran, and Louise Allison Cort. Blunk’s work is included in the collections of the Oakland Museum of California; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; M+, Hong Kong; Museum of Arts and Design, New York; and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, among others.

    © JB Blunk Collection 

  • Works
    JB Blunk, Figure/Odalisque, c. 1991-1996

    JB Blunk

    Figure/Odalisque, c. 1991-1996
    redwood and river stone
    44 x 14 x 10 1/2 inches (overall)
    111.8 x 35.6 x 26.7 cm
    Copyright The Artist
  • Exhibitions
    • JB Blunk: Muse

      JB Blunk: Muse

      November 10 – December 23, 2022 514 West 28th Street, New York
      In collaboration with the Estate of JB Blunk, Kasmin presents the first exhibition of the artist’s jewelry, alongside a selection of paintings, ceramics, and wooden sculpture, to go on view in concurrence with NYC Jewelry Week. Many of the works on view were made by Blunk for his partner and muse Christine Nielson, as well as for family friends, in his studio on their property in Inverness, California.
      View More
    • JB Blunk

      JB Blunk

      October 8 – November 7, 2020 297 Tenth Avenue, New York
      Taking forms from antiquity and mysticism and translating them instinctively through raw, salvaged materials, Blunk produced a body of work that represents an innate expression of, and conversation with, nature. The exhibition is staged in collaboration with the JB Blunk Collection and includes nearly fifty works in ceramic, wood, and stone by the artist.
      View More
  • News
    • JB Blunk reviewed in Cultured Magazine

      JB Blunk reviewed in Cultured Magazine

      by Sophie Lee November 10, 2022 View More
    • New JB Blunk Monograph

      New JB Blunk Monograph

      May 19, 2020 View More
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  • Explore
    • Diana Al-Hadid
    • Alma Allen
    • Theodora Allen
    • Sara Anstis
    • Ali Banisadr
    • Tina Barney
    • Judith Bernstein
    • JB Blunk
    • Mattia Bonetti
    • William N. Copley
    • Cynthia Daignault
    • Ian Davenport
    • Max Ernst
    • Liam Everett
    • Leonor Fini
    • Barry Flanagan
    • Walton Ford
    • Jane Freilicher
    • vanessa german
    • Daniel Gordon
    • Alexander Harrison
    • Elliott Hundley
    • Robert Indiana
    • Lee Krasner
    • Les Lalanne
    • Matvey Levenstein
    • Lyn Liu
    • Robert Motherwell
    • Jamie Nares
    • Nengi Omuku
    • Robert Polidori
    • Jackson Pollock
    • Elliott Puckette
    • Alexis Ralaivao
    • George Rickey
    • James Rosenquist
    • Mark Ryden
    • Jan-Ole Schiemann
    • Joel Shapiro
    • Bosco Sodi
    • Dorothea Tanning
    • Naama Tsabar
    • Bernar Venet

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info@kasmingallery.com

 

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New York
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