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A Fixed-Point Observation from Two Billion Light-Years Away
14 June 2024 - 24 July 2024
FreeEVENT DESCRIPTION
In his poem Two Billion Light-Years of Solitude, Japanese poet Shuntaro Tanikawa expressed humanity’s musings on the universe. In the vast expanse of the cosmos, Earth is but a drop in the ocean. Throughout history, humans have explored their relationship with nature and society, delved into the connection between the human mindset and the external world, and pondered the interplay of passing time and static existence.
Artists serve as vessels of fixed-point observations, keenly capturing and employing diverse media to explore and depict the current state of human society.
Ai☆Madonna’s (b.1984, Tokyo) works portray beautiful girls painted in a characteristic style vividly influenced by Manga. Depicted in cute and sensuous scenes, Ai uses the ‘beautiful girl’ as the medium through which she embodies her own alter ego – regardless of how they are perceived, as long as the beautiful girl achieves perfection, she can express her own voice.
Shuto Okayasu’s (b.1990, Saitama) paintings, deeply influenced by the poems of Shuntaro Tanikawa, ponders on themes such as love, time, human existence, and fate. His practice comprises the endless recording and rebuilding of information to and current behaviours to express the dual relationships between the real and imagined, chaos and harmony; the present and the dream, and the past and the future.
Through the central figure of a curious cloud, Miyu Yamada’s (b.1994, Tokyo) tranquil paintings capture the transient and floating condition which pervades modern society. This theme is reinforced by the artist’s incorporation of sand in her works – symbolic of the boundaries between nature and the city, as well as the inevitability of time and change.
Kazuma Yamamoto’s (b.1998, Tokyo) practice takes the psychology of human behaviours in consumer society as its main theme. Drawing inspiration from popular media sources, his peculiar compositions express the contradictory relationships between ubiquitous human perceptions.
Similarly, Ryohei Nishi’s (b.1999, Shiga) paintings explore the human condition. The artist’s high degree of abstraction portrays uncanny and rough figures which leaves viewers in a state of unease, to parallel the sense of insecurity people experience regarding their own standing in society.
Us solitary humans observe from fixed points on this blue planet, emitting signals that prove our existence. It is a rendezvous of our electric waves – allowing us to coexist upon endless encounters.
Details
- Start:
- 14 June 2024
- End:
- 24 July 2024
- Admission:
- Free
- Event Category:
- Painting
Venue
Organiser
- Tang Contemporary Art
- Phone
- +852 2682 8289
- info@tangcontemporary.com.hk
- View Organiser Website