Japanese artist creates intricate art with salt

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Artist Motoi Yamamoto spends several hours a day painstakingly arranging salt to make intricate designs.

"I think he has a connection, a very special connection with salt," said Jaimi Butler, a biologist with the Great Salt Lake Institute at Westminster College.

Biologists are not the type of group that you'd expect hire an artist, but Butler explained the idea was to give students a different way of looking at the mineral they work with everyday.

"Salt is very important to people that study the Great Salt Lake," Butler said. "It's a fun intersection of art and science, because you know, we tend to think of art and science as two separate disciplines."

Yamamoto made two pieces in Utah: a large, circular labyrinth on the first floor of the science building at Westminster College, and a more swirl-shaped design is inside the Shaw Gallery at Weber State University.

Yamamoto spent about seven days on each work.

"It's simple, but it's very powerful," Matt Choberka, chair of the Department of Visual arts at Weber State, said. "To be able to come in here and see the simplest material, salt out of a squeeze bottle, and to create this very magnificent thing is, I think it's very instructive for everybody."

Yamamoto said while he builds his salt pieces, he often reflects on his sister who died from cancer. During his time in Utah, he became very much a part of each exhibit. Now staffers at each school keep watch over the salt art, making sure the pieces aren't damaged.

"You worry about the wind coming through the door sometimes," Choberka said.

"The thought of somebody walking across it, or somebody dropping their cellphone on it, gives me stress and anxiety," Butler said, describing her appreciation for the work.

On April 12, both art pieces will be ceremoniously swept up and returned to the Great Salt Lake. The two schools are coordinating activities around the event.

"I've been planning what I want to do," Butler said. "Do I want to run across it first? Do I want to do a salt angel? I mean, there's a lot of planning involved with how we're going to sweep it up."

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Artist Motoi Yamamoto spends several hours a day painstakingly arranging salt to make intricate designs.

"I think he has a connection, a very special connection with salt," said Jaimi Butler, a biologist with the Great Salt Lake Institute at Westminster College.

Biologists are not the type of group that you'd expect hire an artist, but Butler explained the idea was to give students a different way of looking at the mineral they work with everyday.

"Salt is very important to people that study the Great Salt Lake," Butler said. "It's a fun intersection of art and science, because you know, we tend to think of art and science as two separate disciplines."

Yamamoto made two pieces in Utah: a large, circular labyrinth on the first floor of the science building at Westminster College, and a more swirl-shaped design is inside the Shaw Gallery at Weber State University.

Yamamoto spent about seven days on each work.

"It's simple, but it's very powerful," Matt Choberka, chair of the Department of Visual arts at Weber State, said. "To be able to come in here and see the simplest material, salt out of a squeeze bottle, and to create this very magnificent thing is, I think it's very instructive for everybody."

Yamamoto said while he builds his salt pieces, he often reflects on his sister who died from cancer. During his time in Utah, he became very much a part of each exhibit. Now staffers at each school keep watch over the salt art, making sure the pieces aren't damaged.

"You worry about the wind coming through the door sometimes," Choberka said.

"The thought of somebody walking across it, or somebody dropping their cellphone on it, gives me stress and anxiety," Butler said, describing her appreciation for the work.

On April 12, both art pieces will be ceremoniously swept up and returned to the Great Salt Lake. The two schools are coordinating activities around the event.

"I've been planning what I want to do," Butler said. "Do I want to run across it first? Do I want to do a salt angel? I mean, there's a lot of planning involved with how we're going to sweep it up."

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