Obituary for Naoto Sekiguchi

Naoto Sekiguchi

Naoto Sekiguchi passed away on September 21, 2021, at the family home in Fayetteville. Naoto was born January 19, 1958, in Tokyo, Japan, to Tochiko and Tetstundo Sekiguchi. As an infant, he, his mother, and elder sister made the voyage to America and moved to Stillwater, Oklahoma, where his father was completing his doctoral degree at Oklahoma State. The Sekiguchis eventually settled in Fayetteville, where they were among the town’s first Asian families. Naoto was a compassionate, gentle, and kind person from the start, who was always creating.

He was a 1976 graduate of Fayetteville High School and graduated on the senior honor roll.

Naoto earned his architectural degree from the University of Arkansas in 1982, and began his career at Fox and Fowle Architects, and later with James Wines at SITE Architecture Art Design in New York City. He worked at numerous firms in Seattle; the Fay Jones and Maurice Jennings studio in Fayetteville; Eric Owen Moss in Culver City, California; Jennifer Siegal OMD in Los Angeles; and firms in Tokyo, Japan, and Penang, Malaysia. Although he was a talented architect, Naoto really shone through his teaching. He worked in the architecture departments at the University of Oregon, University of Minnesota, Chiang Mai University, and Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok, Thailand. He was dedicated and invested in his students and left a lasting impression on many of them.

Naoto at a shrine for the reclining Buddha.

Throughout his life, Naoto traveled the world from Greece to Laos to Malawi. More recently he found homes in Harbin Hot Springs and Sierra Hot Springs in California, and fell in love with Portugal. Naoto approached each new place with curiosity and each person he met with warmth and compassion forming friendships everywhere he went. You could pick a location and, chances are, Naoto had been there and would be able to regale you with a wild and funny story.

Naoto took writing, playing and recording his music, including busking on the streets of Barcelona and Portugal.

Later in his life, Naoto focused increasingly on his creative pursuits, particularly his writing and music, which celebrated the beauty of humanity but also challenged with humor the ills and injustice he saw in the world. Naoto was profoundly empathetic, he felt the world around him even when it hurt. When he saw something he knew was wrong he spoke out and stood his ground. He cared for and gave to people with all of himself.

Naoto is celebrated and deeply missed by his siblings, Tomoko Sekiguchi, Mary Kirasich (Mark), June Sekiguchi, and Eugene Sekiguchi (Alison Parry); as well as his nieces and nephews, Hana Mei, Quin, and Jaden Breeland, Aya Cockram (Gareth Newnham), Joseph Kirasich and Kaitlin Kirasich Kinzer (Sean), and Evan and Mia Sekiguchi who he loved and cherished. He is also survived by greatniece, Cora Newnham, who will grow up listening to his music and being delighted by his art, and dear friends Jane Scroggs, Randall “Poot” Cannon, Jon Green, Emmitte Watson, Jim Horn, Mike Breeland, Michael Cockram, and many others. Our hearts are broken with his loss, but we are thankful that he is resting in peace closer to his mother and father and that he left so much of himself with us in his writing, music, art, and in our wonderful memories of him.

Naoto Sekiguchi

A celebration of life to be held at a future date will be announced.

In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to Mutual Aid Disaster Relief, the Khmer Magic Music Bus, or First Place. To sign the online guest book please visit www.bernafuneralhomes.com.

Poetry in the Schools

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PDF of “Poems”

During the 1975-76 school year, university students in the creative writing program at the University of Arkansas taught elementary and secondary students across the state about poetry and various approaches to writing poems. The outreach program was known at Poetry in the Schools, or PITS for short.

From the writing, several poems from each school were chosen for publication, including more than a dozen written by seniors in the Class of 76. The attached PDF only contains the forward, introduction and poetry from FHS and the PitStop School in Fayetteville.

Today, the program is known as Writers in the Schools, or WITS, and continues to foster creative writing in schools across the state.

Grade 6, Root Elementary

root-6th-Joyce-bill-guirlMrs. Joyce’s class during the 1969-70 school year at Root Elementary.

Front row, from left: Debbie Easley?, Billy Long, Bill Guirl, ??, and Naoto Sekiguchi.
Second row: Howard Hayes, ??, ??, ??, ??, Linda Langham, and Steve Yancey.
Third row: ??, Bob Wilkins?, ??, Art Croswell, Mark McGuire, ??, and Mrs. Joyce.
Fourth row: Susan Chism?, ??, Chris Guinn, Pat O’Bryan, Brian Noland, ??, and Cathy Huff?.

Courtesy of Bill Guirl.

Riggs to Steward

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Becky Riggs

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Marc Riviere

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Phil Robbins

Joey Rodman
Joey Rodman

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Nina Rolloff

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Sharon Sagers

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Ann Scarbrough

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Naoto Sekiguchi

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Lisa Sharp

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Janice Shea

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Janet Sherman

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Pam Sills

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Teena Simpson

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Jan Skarda

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Luanne Smart

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Eric Smith

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Michael Smith

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Sherman Smith

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Steve Smith

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Terri Smith

Theresa Smith
Theresa Smith

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Tim Smith

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Joyce South

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Dwaine Spears

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Mark Springer

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Debbie Spurlock

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Sherri Starr

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Richard Steel

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Susan Stephenson

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Steven Steward