Yumi Kiyose was born in Tokyo, Japan, moved to the United States and lives in Los Angles, California, where she works out of her studio. She received her MFA from Otis/Parsons Art Institute in Los Angeles after earning her BFA at the Kansas City Art Institute. In addition to creating artwork, she has been a ceramics professor at community colleges and universities in the Los Angeles area.
Yumi’s art incorporates, and often combines, clay, glass, bronze, and steel. Her art is an expression of energy and utilizes form, movement, and balance derived from nature. She uses a combination of mixed colors, emphasizing flow and producing harmony and rhythm, drawing the eye in and creating visual enchantment.
Yumi’s ceramics works have enjoyed international exposure in Japan, Canada, and the United States, including shows at The Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, NY, The Utah Museum of Fine Arts, and The American Museum of Ceramics Art, Pomona, CA. Her glass works were shown at Pilchuck Glass School’s auction and National Liberty Museum, Philadelphia, PA.
She has previously worked in public art, and one of her sculptures, Triumph of Knowledge, is in the permanent collection of the Humanities Division at El Camino College in Torrance, CA. She was also a finalist for the Decorative gate projects for Lincoln Height Recreation Center, Los Angeles, CA, and Roger Jessup Park in Pacoima, CA.
Yumi Kiyose was born in Tokyo, Japan, moved to the United States and lives in Los Angles, California, where she works out of her studio. She received her MFA from Otis/Parsons Art Institute in Los Angeles after earning her BFA at the Kansas City Art Institute. In addition to creating artwork, she has been a ceramics professor at community colleges and universities in the Los Angeles area.
Yumi’s art incorporates, and often combines, clay, glass, bronze, and steel. Her art is an expression of energy and utilizes form, movement, and balance derived from nature. She uses a combination of mixed colors, emphasizing flow and producing harmony and rhythm, drawing the eye in and creating visual enchantment.
Yumi’s ceramics works have enjoyed international exposure in Japan, Canada, and the United States, including shows at The Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, NY, The Utah Museum of Fine Arts, and The American Museum of Ceramics Art, Pomona, CA. Her glass works were shown at Pilchuck Glass School’s auction and National Liberty Museum, Philadelphia, PA.
She has previously worked in public art, and one of her sculptures, Triumph of Knowledge, is in the permanent collection of the Humanities Division at El Camino College in Torrance, CA. She was also a finalist for the Decorative gate projects for Lincoln Height Recreation Center, Los Angeles, CA, and Roger Jessup Park in Pacoima, CA.
Yumi Kiyose was born in Tokyo, Japan, moved to the United States and lives in Los Angles, California, where she works out of her studio. She received her MFA from Otis/Parsons Art Institute in Los Angeles after earning her BFA at the Kansas City Art Institute. In addition to creating artwork, she has been a ceramics professor at community colleges and universities in the Los Angeles area.
Yumi’s art incorporates, and often combines, clay, glass, bronze, and steel. Her art is an expression of energy and utilizes form, movement, and balance derived from nature. She uses a combination of mixed colors, emphasizing flow and producing harmony and rhythm, drawing the eye in and creating visual enchantment.
Yumi’s ceramics works have enjoyed international exposure in Japan, Canada, and the United States, including shows at The Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, NY, The Utah Museum of Fine Arts, and The American Museum of Ceramics Art, Pomona, CA. Her glass works were shown at Pilchuck Glass School’s auction and National Liberty Museum, Philadelphia, PA.
She has previously worked in public art, and one of her sculptures, Triumph of Knowledge, is in the permanent collection of the Humanities Division at El Camino College in Torrance, CA. She was also a finalist for the Decorative gate projects for Lincoln Height Recreation Center, Los Angeles, CA, and Roger Jessup Park in Pacoima, CA.
Yumi Kiyose was born in Tokyo, Japan, moved to the United States and lives in Los Angles, California, where she works out of her studio. She received her MFA from Otis/Parsons Art Institute in Los Angeles after earning her BFA at the Kansas City Art Institute. In addition to creating artwork, she has been a ceramics professor at community colleges and universities in the Los Angeles area.
Yumi’s art incorporates, and often combines, clay, glass, bronze, and steel. Her art is an expression of energy and utilizes form, movement, and balance derived from nature. She uses a combination of mixed colors, emphasizing flow and producing harmony and rhythm, drawing the eye in and creating visual enchantment.
Yumi’s ceramics works have enjoyed international exposure in Japan, Canada, and the United States, including shows at The Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, NY, The Utah Museum of Fine Arts, and The American Museum of Ceramics Art, Pomona, CA. Her glass works were shown at Pilchuck Glass School’s auction and National Liberty Museum, Philadelphia, PA.
She has previously worked in public art, and one of her sculptures, Triumph of Knowledge, is in the permanent collection of the Humanities Division at El Camino College in Torrance, CA. She was also a finalist for the Decorative gate projects for Lincoln Height Recreation Center, Los Angeles, CA, and Roger Jessup Park in Pacoima, CA.