(b) "the Met commissioned TANABE Chikuunsai IV [四代 田辺 竹雲斎 or 田辺 竹雲斎(4代); 2nd son of III; II was a son of I], a fourth-generation bamboo artist born in 1973, to create an installation piece that looms over the entrance to the show. 'The Gate,' as it is called, is two thick entwined coils that twist upward from the floor and spread out along the ceiling. Their scale is imposing; they evoke twin baby cyclones or, less violent, the bifurcated trunk of an ancient banyan 榕 tree, but their open-weave, light-colored Tiger bamboo [Chinese: 虎斑竹] is semitransparent and sort of weightless. * * * Throughout the exhibition you will see basketry abstracted, deconstructed and all but exploded in the hands of successive generations of artists. In 1975 TANABE Yōta 田辺 陽太 (1944-2008), a younger brother of Tanabe Chikuunsai III [本名 久雄], created 'Earth Dedicated to Children,' a low-lying mountain (or volcano) form that looks like a miniature earthwork, or maybe a model for James Turrell's 'Roden Crater [which is a real crater].' "
(i) Phyllostachys nigra 'Bory' (Tiger Bamboo). Bamboo Botanicals, undated
www.bamboobotanicals.ca/html/bam ... hys-nigra-bory.html
("A cultivar that orignated from Japan, this bamboo develops dark markings and patterns on it's culms that resemble that of a Tiger. New culms emerge green and slowly develop the markings as the culm ages")
(A) culm (n): "a monocotyledonous stem (as of a grass or sedge)"https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/culm
(B) culm (botany)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culm_(botany)
(i) 田邊陽太 造 「子供たちにささげる土」 Earth Dedicated to Children (1975). The Met, undated.
www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/vi ... ;pos=16&ft=*&offset=20
(A) For the definition of "sasageru," see (a)(ii)(C) above.
(B) The Met identifies the medium as "shichiku ('purple') bamboo." The shi" and "chiku" are, respectively, Chinese pronunciations for kanji 紫 and 竹.
(ii) James Turrell
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Turrell
(1943- ; American)
(c) "Basketry's [basketry: art of making baskets] processes do not extensively transform bamboo * * * The central technique is weaving. There will usually be some cutting or slicing, often into exquisitely thin strands, and maybe some soaking beforehand; along the way rattan might be used for reinforcement and, toward the finish, lacquer may be applied. But that's about it."
(i) "Rattan (from the Malay rotan) is the name for roughly 600 species of old world climbing palms." Wikipedia
(ii) palmbob, Himalaya Rattan Palm (Plectocomia himalayana). Dave's Garden, Feb 22, 2004
https://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/showimage/35376/
This (35376) is a young rattan. Below, the third thumbnail (35375) from the left is a mature one, from a different locale but the same species.
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