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An artist whose glass was aways half full
LYNNE WALSH highly recommends an impressive exhibition of works by Isamu Noguchi who responded to life’s adversity with rare creative panache
(L to R) AKARI (1953); Model for Memorial to the Dead, Hiroshima, 1952; Ruth Page in The Expanding Universe: Costume Sack, 1932 [Credits: (L to R) The Kagawa Museum / Isamu Noguchi / Kevin Noble FS Lincoln]

Noguchi
Barbican, London

INTERNATIONALISM was at the very heart of the life and work of sculptor Isamu Noguchi.

His sense of rootlessness and search for identity could well have produced art that was melancholy and bleak; instead it reveals an infectious optimism that the human spirit can triumph.

A few dissenters may dismiss his portfolio as some rather nice lamps, a somewhat iconic coffee table and plenty of marble and stone works sitting in pretty Japanese gardens.

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