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White House Rose Garden adds Japanese American’s sculpture

The Isamu Noguchi sculpture, “Floor Frame” (1962), is displayed at the White House in Washington, DC, on November 21, 2020. US First Lady Melania Trump on November 20 announced the sculpture would be installed in the White House Rose Garden. The sculpture is the first art work by an Asian American artist to enter the art collection at the White House. (AFP)
The Isamu Noguchi sculpture, “Floor Frame” (1962), is displayed at the White House in Washington, DC, on November 21, 2020. US First Lady Melania Trump on November 20 announced the sculpture would be installed in the White House Rose Garden. The sculpture is the first art work by an Asian American artist to enter the art collection at the White House. (AFP)
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22 Nov 2020 12:11:10 GMT9
22 Nov 2020 12:11:10 GMT9

WASHINGTON: The White House Rose Garden has a new addition, but it isn’t a floral variety.

Melania Trump announced Friday that artwork by Japanese American sculptor Isamu Noguchi has been installed on the east terrace of the famous garden, which she renovated earlier this year.

Noguchi is the first Asian American artist to be featured in the White House collection, according to the first lady and the White House Historical Association. He died in 1988.

Noguchi’s piece, titled “Floor Frame,” was a gift from the privately funded, nonprofit historical association.

“This sculpture not only showcases diversity within our nation’s finest art but it also highlights the beautiful contributions of Asian American artists to the landscape of our country,” the first lady said in a statement announcing the installation.

Noguchi viewed “Floor Frame” as representing the intersection of a tree and the ground, taking on the qualities of both an implied root system and the canopy of a tree, Mrs. Trump’s office said. He envisioned the sculpture placed directly on the ground in order to reconnect viewers to the planet.

Noguchi’s work was installed on the east terrace of the Rose Garden to complement the power symbolized by the Oval Office at the west end of the expanse, the White House said.

Born in Los Angeles, Noguchi spent most of his childhood in his father’s homeland of Japan. After graduating from high school, Noguchi apprenticed with Gutzon Borglum, who created Mount Rushmore in South Dakota.

He later dropped out of Columbia University’s premedical program to pursue a career as a sculptor.

AP

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