Undulating in a Utah Museum of Wonderful Arts gallery, 1000’s of glimmering casts appear to drift all through the house. For his large-scale set up “Stone on Boundary,” Japanese artist Yasuaki Onishi has suspended 5,000 copper foils that he molded over river rocks in each Osaka and Salt Lake Metropolis.
Begun within the artist’s studio in Osaka—a metropolis the place Japanese copper has been refined for export for round two centuries—the set up then traveled to the museum, which sits lower than an hour’s drive from the world’s largest operational open-pit copper mine. Utilizing a component present in each locations and mirroring waterways or rippling topography, Onishi connects two seemingly unrelated areas by means of a standard materials and business.

The artist has lengthy been occupied with how objects work together with their environment, particularly the connection between “optimistic” and “detrimental” house. This spurred a deep dive into molding methods and distinctive makes use of of supplies, which permit him to discover themes revolving round margins, voids, boundaries, and quantity. For the Salt Lake Metropolis set up, he considers the connection between earth, the panorama, and extraction.
“The copper foil created by Onishi presents such absence and presence by means of molding, suggesting that to acknowledge issues, it’s important not solely to know the floor but additionally to richly have interaction the creativeness—and that even with creativeness, one can not see every little thing,” the museum says.
For “Stone on Boundary,” the skinny metallic molds create disc- and cup-like shapes that droop alongside a wire framework, which displays the Wasatch and Oquirrh Mountains round Salt Lake Metropolis. The set up additionally marks the artist’s largest to this point, spanning 12 x 22 x 14 meters.
Discover extra on Onishi’s web site and Instagram.


