Still, Life - まだ、生きてます, Nov. 13 - Dec 5 at @KCUA gallery, Kyoto

Group exhibition with Asuka Hishiki, Sakiko Kurita, Naomi Reis at Kyoto City University of Arts Gallery @KCUA

In English, the term “still life” refers to a scene of living things brought to a halt. In French and Italian respectively, “nature morte” and “natura morta” both translate to “dead nature.” These point to a Western definition of life as something that has movement, while in Japanese, the term is 静物 = quiet object. This emphasis on the objects themselves may connect back to an animistic belief that all things inherently have life, because a deity resides in all things. The three artists of this exhibition— Asuka Hishiki, Sakiko Kurita, and Naomi Reis—consider how what constitutes “life” has shifted from our perspective here in the (post-covid) present.

By adding a comma in the center of the term, “Still, life” suggests that a small change in perception can drastically affect how we see, and how we interpret what we see: even as life is brought still, life continues. Centering the quiet, everyday things we see in our daily lives as subject matter, the artists’ work serves as a switch to make little moments of magic in the everyday more visible. Each viewer, by bringing in their own perspective, will operate those switches differently. “Still, life” is an invitation to see the “life” happening all around us in our everyday encounters with fresh eyes, offering ways to turn on anew to the life that we see.

Photography by Takeru Koroda

Wildflowers and Fever Dreams, April 10 - May 9 at Transmitter

Happy spring! I am excited to invite you to a two-person exhibition at Transmitter with photographer Christopher Rodriguez, curated by Carl Gunhouse. I will be there during extended hours on Saturday, April 10, 1-6pm – hope you can join!

This mixed-media series is my most personal to-date, and are based on photographs of flower arrangements made by my mother. These photographs, shot casually by my mom to be shared with her kids, have become a kind of familial timepiece, a way to mark the changing seasons and passage of time as we await our next meeting, oceans away.

Transmitter is open weekends from 3-6pm and by appointment. Masks are required. In observance of New York's Covid-19 safety procedures, viewing is limited to one group at a time, up to 4 per group.

Press Release

From left: Christopher Rodriguez, Naomi Kawanishi Reis

From left: Christopher Rodriguez, Naomi Kawanishi Reis