In 2014, nearly twenty-five years after his first artist residency at Mission Clay Products, Jun Kaneko began his third project with the company. Mission Clay is an industrial terracotta pipe manufacturer with locations in Fremont, California, Pittsburg, Kansas, and Phoenix, Arizona. Kaneko used Mission Clay’s facilities and kilns in Fremont and Pittsburg to construct enormous ceramic heads and dangos in the preceding decades, and for his third residency, he went to Mission Clay’s worksite in Phoenix.
For this project, Kaneko was intrigued at the notion of using the company’s product itself as a medium for his creative vision. What could he do with one hundred clay sewer pipes, each standing thirteen feet tall? Kaneko transformed the pipes into an array of brightly colored, striped columns. With this new shape, Kaneko had another opportunity to challenge his creativity by working with manufactured terracotta forms. Having no plan for what to do with them once they were finished, he gave way to his curiosity and transformed the columns into art.
Once the columns were constructed, they were dried and glazed, without the step of bisque firing. Nine columns at a time could be fired in the center of the immense beehive kiln, and that same number is all that would fit on a semi-truck bed for their journey to Omaha. Upon arrival, they were arranged in Kaneko’s studio until a private collector purchased thirty-eight of them for their sculpture garden, commissioning Kaneko to design their installation. Several more columns are also installed at the University of Nebraska Medical Center campus in Omaha.
Origin, Columns
2015
Hand glazed ceramic, 148 x 30 inches each. Collection of the University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE, USA.
Photo: Susan Schonlau
Origin, Columns
2015
Hand glazed ceramic, 148 x 30 inches each. Collection of the University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE, USA.
Photo: Susan Schonlau
Untitled, Columns
2015
Hand glazed ceramic, 148 x 30 inches each. Private collection.
Photo: Takashi Hatakeyama
Untitled, Columns
2015
Hand glazed ceramic, 148 x 30 inches each. Private collection.
Photo: Cole Sartore
Untitled, Columns
2015
Hand glazed ceramic, 148 x 30 inches each. Private collection.
Photo: Takashi Hatakeyama
Untitled, Columns
2015
Hand glazed ceramic, 148 x 30 inches each. Private collection.
Photo: Takashi Hatakeyama
Unglazed pipes at Building Products Company, Mission Clay Products
2015
Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Photo: Takashi Hatakeyama
Clay extrusion, Building Products Company, Mission Clay Products
2015
Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Photo: Takashi Hatakeyama
Extruded pipe being stamped. Building Products Company, Mission Clay Products
2016
Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Photo: Takashi Hatakeyama
Building Products Company, Mission Clay Products
2015
Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Photo: Takashi Hatakeyama
Working at Building Products Company, Mission Clay Products
2015
Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Photo: Ree Kaneko
Jun glazing Columns at Building Products Company, Mission Clay Products
2015
Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Photo: Takashi Hatakeyama
Loading Columns into kiln at Building Products Company, Mission Clay Products
2016
Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Photo: Takashi Hatakeyama
Loading Columns into kiln at Building Products Company, Mission Clay Products
2016
Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Photo: Takashi Hatakeyama
Loading Columns into kiln at Building Products Company, Mission Clay Products
2016
Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Photo: Takashi Hatakeyama
Working at Building Products Company, Mission Clay Products
2015
Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Photo: Ree Kaneko
Columns in kiln at Building Products Company, Mission Clay Products
2015
Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Photo: Takashi Hatakeyama
Jun and assistants unloading finished Columns at studio.
2015
Omaha, NE, USA.
Photo: Takashi Hatakeyama
Jun and assistants unloading finished Columns at studio.
2015
Omaha, NE, USA.
Photo: Takashi Hatakeyama