- Perspectives
- OLD & NEW
Artists Mix It Up With Small Factory’s Artisans in Tokyo
Old & New video
14:01 JST, April 28, 2024
Tucked away in a residential area of the old part of Tokyo’s Edogawa Ward sits a small metalworking factory. Nishikawa Seiki Seisakusho Co., founded in 1960, consists of four executives and eight employees, and carries out the entire process of designing, cutting, welding, sheet-metal processing and assembly of metallic products. The company has also made a name for itself in the past five years or so for developing original archery bows in Japan.
But Nishikawa Seiki stands out in another way as well. The company has set up a free studio in which up-and-coming artists can hone their skills.
Eiko Miki, 37, a metal hammering artist living in Ichikawa, Chiba Prefecture, is one of the artists making use of the studio. Miki gains inspiration during her travels, mainly in Latin America, and turns them into works of art for display. Upon completing a graduate program at the Tokyo University of the Arts, she also created large pieces at the studio for a personal exhibition.
“Since this is a factory, noise is not a problem, and it has special machines for bending and cutting metal,” Miki said. “On top of that, the life of an artist is quite solitary — I am no exception — but here, I can learn directly from experienced employees about metals and gain a connection to society.
“Without gaining the experience at this studio that isn’t taught at the university, I would not be the artist that I am today.”
An exhibition of works she created in the studio and other places is planned for the Den Gallery in Tokyo’s Higashi Nakano district from April 28 to June 2.
In 2016, Nishikawa Seiki launched its “Koba Project” for young artists and students at Tokyo University of the Arts and other universities, providing everything from studio space to technical advice for free.
“Artists and small factories are very similar in that they both create things, but the sensibilities differ” said Nishikawa Seiki President Yoshihisa Nishikawa, 58. “Just coming into contact with the thinking of young people stimulates us. I have learned that things that fascinate people have some sort of implicit meaning, which you can’t get from words or numbers.”
The company is still accepting new artists. Inspiration gained through this project is said to be reflected in the design of the archery equipment developed by the company.
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