minerals

american minerals | japanese minerals


In my series “Minerals,” I point to the absurdity of objectification and stereotyping by reducing celebrities to their most salient characteristics. Using mineralogy as a framework, I assign famous faces to represent mineral–and human–properties such as color (Barry White), hardness (Clint Eastwood) and cleavage (Dolly Parton). The pairings are sometimes humorous or infuriating; that is, once they become explicit. Like implicit bias, the small face patterns in the background are indiscernible at first glance because the focal point, a large shape in the center, dominates the composition. First developed based on American culture, the Minerals series was later redeveloped using faces that are famous in Japan, proving that regardless of culture, a cliché, a stereotype or a façade always hides something more complex.

The Mineralogical Scales (Japanese Interpretation):

  • High Hardness: Ken Takakura, Japanese mafia (“yakuza”) film star

  • Low Hardness: Funassyi, cuddly pear mascot of the city of Funabashi

  • High Color: Kyary Pamyu Pamyu, Harajuku style icon

  • Low Color: Kaonashi, faceless spirit from the Miyazaki film “Spirited Away”

  • High Streak (true color): Black Jack, good Samaritan with a scary face from the manga series by Osamu Tezuka

  • Low Streak (true color): Mamoru Samuragochi, the fraudulent “Japanese Beethoven” who feigned deafness

  • High Transparency: Haruka Ayase, actress who is famous for her flawlessly pale complexion

  • Low Transparency: Danté Carver, American actor well known as Softbank’s “Yosō Guy”

  • High Luster: Sachiko Kobayashi, “Queen of Enka”, famous for elaborately lit-up costumes

  • Low Luster: kuroko, stagehand dressed in black so as to seem invisible

  • High Cleavage (splits cleanly): Shinzō Abe, Prime Minister whose policies sharply divide Japanese public opinion

  • Low Cleavage (doesn’t split): Ieyasu Tokugawa, Shōgun who unified Japan

  • High Habit/Form (shape): Shinichi Shinohara, champion Judoka who stands tall at 190cm

  • Low Habit/Form (shape): Takashi Okamura, comedian known for his diminutive stature

  • High Density: Matsuko Deluxe, corpulent TV personality

  • Low Density: Ittan Momen, an evil yokai that takes the form of a flying sheet of fabric

  • High Symmetry: The Touch, comedy duo comprised of identical twin brothers

  • Low Symmetry: Takeshi Kitano, celebrated filmmaker with partial facial paralysis

  • High Radioactivity: Genpatsu-kun, animated character by Kazuhiko Hachiya that appeared on Japanese television on March 15, 2011

  • Low Radioactivity: Katsushika Hokusai, famed ukiyo-e artist who used Prussian Blue pigment, an antidote to radiation poisoning