Inauguration of the sculpture "Usagi Greeting (180)" by Leiko Ikemura

The PURPLE PATH art and sculpture trail is the most extensive project in the Capital of Culture region. It connects the 38 participating municipalities with each other and with the city of Chemnitz. By 2025, a unique exhibition of contemporary art in public spaces will be created with works by national and international artists.

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Lichtenwalde Baroque Palace

The patinated bronze sculpture Usagi Greeting by the artist Leiko Ikemura, who was born in Tsu/Japan in 1951 and now lives in Berlin, is a pictorial-poetic encounter between the figure of the hare (Japanese Usagi) and representations of Buddhist bodhisattva beings and Christian iconography of mercy.

The 180 cm high sculpture is the first realisation of this theme, which the artist has been working on again and again since 2002. The concentrated facial expression of the figure, modelled only by a few elevations and depressions, appears twice: on the front and on the back. It is emphasised by the vertical rabbit ears, which convey alertness. The two arms held in front of the upper body as if in prayer reflect a tapered opening in the bell-shaped lower part, reminiscent of the protective cloak of a Madonna. The opening provides a view of a small, perforated space inside the sculpture; translucent light creates a miniature firmament. The formal boundaries between human, animal and plant figures are fluid in the pictorial worlds of Ikemura, who was a successful painter in the 1980s. They are inspired by the religious symbols and creatures of Japan, with which the artist mixes and confronts the European understanding of nature and art.
The placement of Ikemura's Usagi Greeting in the courtyard of the baroque Lichtenwalde castle complex makes reference to the collections of Asian artefacts on display in the Schatzkammer Museum: Chinoiseries meet art and ritual artefacts from Nepal, Tibet, China and Japan. By contextualising her sculpture, the artist extends the museum presentation beyond the visual display value and exploratory observation to include the mysticism inscribed in the objects as well as their history. Ikemuras Usagi thus expands the Purple Path to include a content-related perspective: it leads the gaze from the European context to the cultures of East Asia.

With greetings from:

  • Patrizia Meyn, Managing Director of Augustusburg/Scharfenstein/Lichtenwalde Schlossbetriebe gGmbH
  • Dagmar Ruscheinksy, Mayor for Social Affairs, Youth, Health, Culture and Sport, City of Chemnitz
  • Stefan Schmidtke, Managing Director Programme European Capital of Culture Chemnitz 2025 gGmbH

Introduces the work:

  • Alexander Ochs, Curator of the PURPLE PATH

The artist Leiko Ikemura will be present.

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PURPLE PATH art and sculpture trail

Together with Chemnitz, 38 municipalities and communities form the Capital of Culture region, which will be the European Capital of Culture in 2025. The PURPLE PATH, a large art and sculpture trail and the main project of the European Capital of Culture, will be created in the region by 2025 and beyond.

European Capital of Culture The Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and Media Free State of Saxony European Capital of Culture

This project is cofinanced by tax funds on the basis of the parliamentary budget of the state of Saxony and by federal funds from the Beauftragte der Bundesregierung für Kultur und Medien (Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and Media), as well as funds from the City of Chemnitz.