Art & Design

Toru Ishii: Delirious Metropolis

20 May - 15 July 2014, London

Based on the subject of physicality and topicality within the delirious metropolis, Toru Ishii’s first solo exhibition in the UK aims to achieve a hybrid of expression in elements such as the past and present and the digital and analogue. He challenges how traditional art can exist in this modern age, and attempts to find a new paradigm of art by employing long-established techniques. These works are in a two-part series, Salarymen and After-image.

 

The first of the two-part series is Salarymen, the office workers who are a common feature in our cities and characterise today’s capitalist society. The second part, After-image, is based on current events and the everyday incidents and accidents that surround us in a modern city in the era of information technology, and here Ishii recaptures images featured in the media that viewers have retained in their memory.

 

Ishii’s works also raise the question of the cognitive ambiguity of the visual imagery between reality and fiction in an information-saturated world, especially after the 2011 Great Tohoku Earthquake and Tsunami in Japan.

 

Ishii utilises the Itome Yuzen dyeing method to depict the iconography of modern society, extending the potential of this traditional art to reflect on modern subjects. Just like the Japanese print maker, Katsushika Hokusai, who portrayed the mundane customs of everyday life in Edo era, Ishii reflects on the current events and manifestation of society today, and adds an innovative value to the traditional technique of Itome Yuzen.


The exhibition is supported by The Asahi Shimbun Foundation.

Image: On the Crossroad, 2012, Yuzen Dyeing on silk © Toru Ishii


 

Private View:

20 May 2014

Based on the subject of physicality and topicality within the delirious metropolis, Toru Ishii’s first solo exhibition in the UK aims to achieve a hybrid of expression in elements such as the past and present and the digital and analogue. He challenges how traditional art can exist in this modern age, and attempts to find a new paradigm of art by employing long-established techniques. The artist will be introduced by Professor Lesley Millar, Director of the Anglo-Japanese Textile Research Centre at the University for the Creative Arts.

 

 

Artist talk: Toru Ishii: Delirious Metropolis

17 June 2014, 6.00pm - 8.00pm

Based on the subject of physicality and topicality within the delirious metropolis, Toru Ishii’s first solo exhibition in the UK aims to achieve a hybrid of expression in elements such as the past and present and the digital and analogue. He challenges how traditional art can exist in this modern age, and attempts to find a new paradigm of art by employing long-established techniques. These works are in a two-part series, Salarymen andAfter-image.

The first of the two-part series is Salarymen, the office workers who are a common feature in our cities and characterise today’s capitalist society. The second part, After-image, is based on current events and the everyday incidents and accidents that surround us in a modern city in the era of information technology, and here Ishii recaptures images featured in the media that viewers have retained in their memory.

Ishii’s works also raise the question of the cognitive ambiguity of the visual imagery between reality and fiction in an information-saturated world, especially after the 2011 Great Tohoku Earthquake and Tsunami in Japan.

Ishii utilises the Itome Yuzen dyeing method to depict the iconography of modern society, extending the potential of this traditional art to reflect on modern subjects. Just like the Japanese print maker, Katsushika Hokusai, who portrayed the mundane customs of everyday life in Edo era, Ishii reflects on the current events and manifestation of society today, and adds an innovative value to the traditional technique of Itome Yuzen.

The artist is joined by Professor Lesley Millar, Professor of Textile Culture and Director of the Anglo-Japanese Textile Research Centre at the University for the Creative Arts.

 

 

Booking is essential to attend this event. If you wish to attend the artist talk with Gozo Yoshimasu (held on the same evening), additional booking is also required- please click here to book.

20 May - 15 July 2014

Daiwa Foundation Japan House, 13/14 Cornwall Terrace, London NW1 4QP UK

Tel: 020 7486 4348 Fax: 020 7486 2914

Email:office@dajf.org.uk

Daiwa Anglo-Japanese Foundation

 
 
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