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1980 RECIPIENT
Doucet-Saito Ceramic Artists
About the craftspeople
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"The work of Doucet-Saito is neither sensational nor arbitrary. It has
evolved year by year, in effect exploring all the possibilities of the
slab: multiplied horizontally, it becomes a mosaic; layered vertically, it
becomes a style; joined in three dimensions, it becomes an urn, a vase, a
torso, which may then be opened, unfolded, split Like a cell. Throughout,
there is a play of textures and forms, of inside and outside, of the yin
and the yang. Radically sculptural, theirs is an art realized through the
hands a bodily synthesis of knowledge and desire."
D.G. Jones
Professor of English
Université de Sherbrooke
Sherbrooke, Quebec
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A fusion of sensibilities personal, cultural and aesthetic
in both life and work has been the objective of the ceramic artists known
professionally as Doucet-Saito. When they first met, in a pottery workshop
in North Hatley, Quebec, Louise Doucet was a graduate of the School of Art
and Design, Montréal Museum of Fine Arts, and Satoshi Saito was a
Tokyo-born graduate student studying economics at McGill University.
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Untitled, 1980
Stoneware
21 cm (height) x 34 cm x 19 cm
Image used with permission of the artists
Archives - Box 592, F6 and F7
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Sharing a common interest in ceramics, they married and went to Japan to
study with pottery masters. Since their return to Canada, they have worked
together on a farm in the Eastern Townships of Quebec.
For Doucet-Saito, Life in Canada has Liberated them from following any
particular ceramic tradition, leaving them free to draw inspiration from
the great works of Oriental ceramic art as well as from ancient
Pre-Columbian, Greek, Egyptian and Etruscan art.
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Untitled, 1980
Stoneware
42 cm x 33 cm x 25 cm
Image used with permission of the artists
Archives - Box 592, F6 and F7
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Through their dedicated efforts to perfect their skills, research local
clays, and explore the formal qualities of the ceramic medium, Doucet-Saito
have achieved a sophisticated mastery of their craft. Gradually, their
vessels have evolved into expressions of pure form.
That some critics classify their work as ceramics and others as sculpture
is irrelevant to Doucet-Saito. Their interest lies in creating, together,
ceramic works that communicate directly to the viewer something of the joy,
risk and reward that is their life and art.
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Satoshi and Louise Saito
firing a wood-burning kiln
at Mashiko, Japan, April 1967
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Ceramic mural (detail) by Doucet-Saito,
Imperial Life Assurance Company of
Canada, Toronto, photographed in
1985
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