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  1. National Museum of Women in the Arts. Works by Yuriko Yamaguchi in the renovated National Museum of Women in the Arts. https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/art/2023/10/20/kennicott-national-museum-women-art/. Read more.

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      "Coexist" at Addison & Riplay Fine Art, Washington, DC,...

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      Jean L Cohen, “Yuriko Yamaguchi, Addison/Ripley Fine Art,...

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      Yamaguchi’ sculptures, compelling in their ambiguity,...

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      Barbara Davis Gallery4411 Montrose Blvd # 600, Houston, TX...

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  2. Yuriko Yamaguchi was born in Osaka, Japan, after the Second World War. When she moved to the United States at the age of twenty-three, she barely spoke English and turned to art to express herself, exploring her identity as a “tiny being in a vast universe.”

    • January 26, 1948
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  4. Yuriko Yamaguchi (born 1948) is a Japanese-born American contemporary sculptor and printmaker. Using more natural mediums, she creates abstract designs that are used to reflect deeper symbolistic ideas. She currently resides near Washington, D.C..

  5. Jewish Federation of Greater Washington, Rockville, Maryland, 30′ x 20′ wall. Sun & Water, detail LED light behind sculpture illuminates. Autopoiesis, 2012, Washington DC, hand cast resin, stainless steel wire, 128′ x 10′ ceiling space.

  6. Browse artists. Yuriko Yamaguchi received her MFA from the University of Maryland and her BA from the University of California at Berkeley. Her works are in museum and public collections, among them The Library of Congress, the Fine Art Museum Houston, the Yale University Museum, the Museum of Haus Kasuta, Japan, the Museum of Modern Art ...

  7. When she moved to the United States at the age of twenty-three, she barely spoke English and turned to art to express herself, exploring her identity as a "tiny being in a vast universe." She links elements with wood or wires and hangs her works on walls and ceilings to represent her spiritual connections with the world around her.

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