Makoto Fujimura - Art Is: A Journey into the Light (Signed & Inscribed)

Makoto Fujimura - Art Is: A Journey into the Light (Signed & Inscribed)

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Signed and inscribed by Makoto Fujimura.

Please write your personalized inscription request (one line) in the Special Instructions note on the Cart page before purchasing.

No return or refund. Shipping can take up to 5 weeks due to Mr. Fujimura's travel schedule.

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WINNER OF THE CHRISTIANITY TODAY 2025 BOOK AWARD FOR CULTURE, POETRY, AND THE ARTS

Makoto Fujimura’s latest offering is part memoir, part artist statement, threaded with theology as creative practice. He deliberately eschews a linear argument in favor of constructing his text as he does his Nihonga paintings: with slow, allusive layers that glimmer differently in different light.

—Elissa Yukiko Weichbrodt, professor of art and art history, Covenant College

From a widely celebrated artist, this dazzling book takes readers on a profound journey into the heart of creativity

When Makoto Fujimura painted as a child, he felt a mysterious electrical charge pass through him. Over decades of art making, writing, and reflecting in his studio, he has come to understand this charge as his Creator—a source he connects with most profoundly when making art. To be human is to be creative, Fujimura believes, and art making is a discipline of awareness, prayer, and praise by which we journey back to our original light.
 
In this book, Fujimura takes readers along on his meandering journey as an artist. We witness him making his “process-driven slow art”—using pulverized minerals, gold, or pigments made from oyster shell—as he considers the plants and wildlife on the land where he lives. He draws on Japanese aesthetics, modernist art, Christian theology, sado (art of tea), literature, ecology, and personal narrative, with inspiration ranging from William Blake’s poetry to the art of Mark Rothko and Josef Albers, and from the wisdom of Scripture and Japanese tea master Sen no Rikyū to the traditional Japanese painting technique called Nihonga.
 
Bringing together the author’s written reflections and his paintings, drawings, and photographs, Art Is invites us to see the world in prismatic and diverse lights, helping us navigate the fractured, divisive times we live in.

All proceeds go to fund Culture Care Creative initiatives.