“Views of Life” Exhibition

hpgrp gallery

poster for “Views of Life” Exhibition

This event has ended.

Views of Life presents eight Japanese artists, five based in New York and three in Japan, who cast an intent look on “life” in its many different manifestations, personal, social, or historical. In doing so, some of them also interrogate the meaning of “viewing” itself.

Hailing from Kyoto, Kohei Yamashita offers a metaphor for the nature of “viewing.” In rest and other works from his mountain series, he invites the visitor to look into a telescope installed in a gallery. In its eyepiece, the visitor will see a mountaineer resting on a mountainside (or climbing up or arriving at a mountaintop, depending on the work) as though she likewise were on a climbing trek. Once she realizes that she is looking at a small figure posed on a seemingly nondescript rock placed away from the telescope, her attention shifts to the rock to look at it and the figure placed on it up close with her naked eye. The work points at once to the extremely sharp but inevitably narrow focus of the telescope and the unencumbered yet imperfect range of our eyesight, both of which are necessary to have a good “view” of things in our life.

Trained in ceramics at New York University, Kenjiro Kitade uses the image of “sheep” to see “human shortcomings.” In his latest work, New World Order and Every Cloud Has a Silver Lining, he references two recent events, today’s information revolution and the disaster at the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant, with his Sheep Man holding a smart phone and riding on an atomic cloud in search of happiness. His message is cautionary: “Life is liable to vicissitude” and “Do you want to continue living a life with greed?”

Both Takashi Horisaki and Takako Oishi look at life in social dimensions. Having studied in the southern cities of New Orleans and St. Louis, Horisaki developed a community-based project titled Social Dress. By taking latex molds of architectural surfaces—window frames, doors, street numbers, and such— to which adhere strata of their aged and deteriorating surfaces, he looks at these layers to understand “actions, interactions, environment, and origin” of an often rundown part of a city. In recent projects in Buffalo (2010), New Orleans (2007), and St. Louis (2012), he mobilized local art students and residents to help him assemble latex layers in such a way that they, too, could see their city in layers of surface. A recent M.F.A. from Hunter College, Oishi considers herself as a “social artist” who views human interactions through her video, photography, and performances. With her “new documentary” method, her subject—for example, a cookie artist in Moist and Tasty—becomes her “co-author,” who inspires the artist to expand her inquiry to provoke culturally inflected chats on sex among her Japanese friends. Her nonstructural video with interplay among herself, her subject, and other participants amounts to a social critique with no conclusion, only revelation.

Longtime New Yorkers, Katsuhiro Saiki and Toru Hayashi look at landscape. A formalist interested in the counter-aesthetic of monotonous cityscapes, which he has developed into several photographic series that exploit Minimalist repetition and installation-based display among other strategies. In his effort to spatialize photography, Study for Metropolis, begun in 2006, stands out. It is a three-dimensional “portable” study of Manhattan’s modernist skyscrapers, wherein he transforms his photographs into polyhedrons, presenting an alternative perspective on his current hometown. In contrast, Hayashi is a conceptualist who maintains the traveler’s eye, or rather embraces the idea of “travel agency.” In this capacity, he presents the famous landmarks of a city—say, Berlin and New York in this exhibition—as a series of “landscapes as personal space.” At first glance, a system of representation he has devised seems cryptic: a straight monochrome photograph of a given site juxtaposed with a color picture of the sky above it (both taken by him), with the latter marked by hand-drawn color circles (which represents the first letter of the site’s name). But once we understand it, we join him in a trip he personally crafted. He thus proposes to liberate tourism from all the clichés.

A women’s personal life is a shared subject of Hiroko Nakao and Noriko Shinohara, but they look at it in different ways. Long based in London and now back in Tokyo, Nakao explores “seduction, desire, and apparent beauty” in exquisitely crafted objects which have a strong feminist overtone. The color red has recurred in her oeuvre, including Red Skin and Little Red Riding Hood. Unlike these previous works, which touch upon an uneasy feeling of adult womanhood, her drawing series Red Shoes addresses a girl’s curiosity with and aspiration to mature femininity, which is represented by her feet stuck in an oversized pair of her mother’s cheap red high heels. Shinohara goes very personal with her Cutie and the Bullie, a series of drawings based on her life in New York as an aspiring artist with her “enfant terrible” artist husband. Intended for an artist book, these drawings chronicle a few decades’ worth of toils suffered by Cutie, Shinohara’s alter ego. Nearing the completion of the series, she excerpts the ending episode for this exhibition. After all these often bitter years, she demonstrates a gracious degree of resilience in an optimistic finale.

Taken together, Views of Life showcases a wide range of emerging and promising talents, each contributing to this exhibition works that encapsulate the essence of their aesthetic and theoretical engagements with today’s complex world.

Media

Schedule

from July 19, 2012 to August 31, 2012

Opening Reception on 2012-07-19 from 18:00 to 20:00

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