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'A Grand Journey' into Japanese art and tradition by Betsey Norgard
This journey into Japanese art grew indirectly from two summer teaching visits at Augsburg in 1970 and 1974 by Toshi Yoshida, a third-generation Yoshida family artist. Known for his woodblock prints, he had been connected to the College by an Augsburg alumnus, Noboru Sawai from Japan. During the Skibbes' first visit to Japan in 1985, they called Yoshida, at the suggestion of art department chair Phil Thompson, and reached Yoshida's son, Tsukasa. Their first purchase was five woodblock printswith them, their collection and a deep fascination were launched.
"There is no substitute for living with works of art and taking the timealone and in silenceto allow individual pieces to speak," Skibbe wrote in the book, Yoshida Hodaka: The Magic of Art. Skibbe readily reflects
on the dichotomy in his life as an art collector and a theologian. "There's
a collision or struggle," he says. "Art is teaching me He explains that the other part of his life, the gospel, is so much more important than the intellectual curiosities of looking at a picture or trying to understand an artistic career. It is the new life that arises from God's forgiveness. In addition to the two Yoshida books he has published since his retirement in 1995, Skibbe has also continued his vocational work with the publishing of two books about the life and thought of Edmund Schlink, the German theologian who was a pioneer in the church's modern ecumenical movement and Skibbe's doctoral adviser in Heidelberg. The first, published in 1999, is a biography about Schlink's life and work; the second, published last year, is a translation of his vision of all the various churches united ecumenically in Christ. In conjunction with the MIA exhibit, Augsburg will host an exhibit of works by seven of Toshi Yoshida's students, including his son, Tsukasa, in the Gage Family Gallery in Lindell Library. All 41 pieces in the exhibition are loaned from Gene and Margaret Skibbe's collection. The exhibition runs from March 15 to April 18; for gallery hours, see the Calendar in this issue.
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Augsburg College all rights reserved. |