#005
Tomoko Yabumae

藪前 知子

Angel’s Perch

ARTIST
ARTIST

Onchi Kōshirō

Shoko Masunaga

Yaya Ueda

2023.10.7 Sat. — 2023.10.27 Fri.
#005
Tomoko Yabumae

藪前 知子

Angel’s Perch

ARTIST
ARTIST

Onchi Kōshirō

Shoko Masunaga

Yaya Ueda

2023.10.7 Sat. — 2023.10.27 Fri.
13

Onchi Kōshirō, Title Unknown

Photo: Tadayuki Minamoto

Shoko Masunaga, A-1,A-2,A-3

Yaya Ueda, METAL GLUE(Möbius strip)

Outline
Date

2023.10.07 Sat. — 2023.10.21 Sat.

(Closed on Sunday and Holiday)

Hours

10:00 — 18:00

Venue

Shibunkaku Ginza

Ichibankan-Building
5-3-12 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 104-0061, Japan

Contact

Shibunkaku Ginza

TEL: 03-3289-0001

MAIL: tokyo@shibunkaku.co.jp

Curator’s Statement

Tomoko Yabumae

A pioneer of the sōsaku-hanga (“creative prints”) movement as well as in abstract painting in Japan, Onchi Kōshirō, was said to have gathered bits of trees and junk he picked up from streets and vacant lots in a wooden box and sometimes played with them, calling them “Hima-no-Otsukiai[1]”. Shortly after the war, he began improvising with these objects and printing their various compositions on paper. Later on, this method of printmaking without engraving was called multi-block printing. Around the same time, he left behind a different work from his prints, also called “Hima-no-Otsukiai”. This work, combining trees, stones, triangles, circles, and contrasting elements, invokes familiar images in our minds. In this exhibition, we positioned Onchi Kōshirō’s “Title Unknown” (c.1949) as a starting point, an “angelic” work seemingly appearing from the rubble of war, and invited two artists in conversation, Shoko Masunaga and Yaya Ueda, whose works similarly resonate with his process of creating images. In our world today, in which we are flooded by a tidal wave of images, their works will surely guide us as to how we can relearn the active act of “seeing”.

 

Onchi considered the woodblock print, created by layering prints, to be the most “compositional process” in painting. This was because expressing different ideas and scenes in a single picture could be done by simply printing them on separate woodblock plates and combining them on paper, without having to mix colors on one surface.

 

Yaya Ueda, who also studied printmaking, employs a variety of media to investigate the integration of disparate worlds. Her most important tool is a camera she refers to as “Metal Glue (metallic adhesive).” While photography captures the moment within the existence of a fragile three-dimensional object, Ueda aims to capture the relationship between its visual components, not only in terms of their movements dictated by gravity but also in relation to other physical objects emphasized by the medium of the photograph; in other words, she is attempting to capture something that can only exist in an image.

 

Shoko Masunaga’s paintings have a plasticity and dynamism to them as if they are suspended in time. The artist incorporates a variety of colors that change subtly depending on the viewer’s psychology and environment, lines with various properties and origins, and, at times, reversals of the paintings’ structures or motifs, as well as the back and front, while leaving traces of these processes of exchange. Masunaga’s decisions and hand gestures, as well as the sensory responses she receives from the materials, convey the complexity and richness of the visual experience.

 

Through playing hand games with the fragile junk of the chaotic postwar period, Onchi Kōshirō put his trust in the manifestation of an angel. Its presence, as a messenger from the invisible world, may have appeared to help put together the world that had fallen apart. This exhibition will touch on and inform viewers about this fundamental subject: How do we call a simple assortment of materials a work of art and are then compelled to share it with each other?

[1] “Hima-no-Otsukiai” roughly translates to “Free time Companions”

Curator

Tomoko Yabumae

As a curator of the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, she was in charge of curating the following exhibitions from 2004 to 2022. Shinro Ohtake Zen-kei Retrospective 1955-2006 (2006), Sayoko Yamaguchi: The Wearist, Clothed in the Future (2015), An Art Exhibition for Children: Whose place is this? (2015), Eiko Ishioka: Blood,Sweat,and Tears-A Life of Design (2020), Christian Marclay Translating (2021). She also curated Sapporo International Art Festival 2017. Her writings on modern and contemporary Japanese art have appeared in a number of journals in Japan.

Photo by Takehiro Goto

Artists

Onchi Kōshirō

Printmaker from Tokyo. Onchi studied at the Hakuba-kai (‘White Horse Society’) Institute of Western-style Painting (Yōga), then together with Tanaka Kyokichi and Fujimori Shizuo, Onchi founded the poetry and print magazine, Tsukuhae (‘Moonglow’). In 1919, he co-founded the Japan Creative Print Association with Yamamoto Kanae and established the Japan Print Association in 1931. Later he became a member of the Kokuga Sosaku Kyokai (‘National Painting Creation Association’). Onchi played a significant role in the development of creative printmaking, designing the covers for Hagiwara Sakutarō’s poetry collection, Tsuki ni Hoeru, (‘Howling at the Moon’) and the complete works of tanka poet Kitahara Hakushū. In 1938, he established the printmaking research group, Ichimoku-kai (‘First Thursday Society’), and formed the Japan Abstract Art Club with Kawaguchi Kigai and Hasegawa Saburō after World War II. Onchi is highly regarded as a pioneer and leader of abstract printmaking.

Photo: Tadayuki Minamoto

Shoko Masunaga

Contemporary artist.

 

Masunaga begins with painting and employs a variety of techniques developed through careful observation and discovery of factors such as the space in which the work is placed, the immediate environment (and lifestyle) in which it is created, and all the elements “inside” the work and the various relationships that connect it to its “outside.”

 

Masunaga was born in Osaka in 1980. She graduated from Seian Zokei Junior College in 2001 with a degree in painting. From 2018 to 2019, she was a recipient of the Program for Overseas Study for Upcoming Artists scholarship (from the Agency for Cultural Affairs) and participated in NARS Foundations International Residency Program in Brooklyn. She is currently based in Saitama Prefecture.

photo: Masumi Kawamura

Yaya Ueda

Beginning with taking photos of self-sculpted objects, Yaya Ueda uses printmaking, drawing, and collage, intending to come across the moment when objects from separate places meet one another. Further, as a member of the artist collective “THE COPY TRAVELERS,” she has been endeavoring to investigate the possibilities of the “duplicate”.

Photo Teppei Sako

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