Showing posts with label Yoshitomo Nara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yoshitomo Nara. Show all posts

13/07/25

Yoshitomo Nara @ Hayward Gallery, London - Retrospective Exhibition

Yoshitomo Nara
Hayward Gallery, London
10 June - 31 August 2025

Yoshitomo Nara Portrait
Portrait of Yoshitomo Nara 
© the artist and the Yoshitomo Nara Foundation
Photo: Ryoichi Kawajiri 

Yoshitomo Nara, Harmless Kitty
Installation view of Yoshitomo Nara 
Harmless Kitty, 1994
Photo: Mark Blower 
Courtesy the artist and the Hayward Gallery

Yoshitomo Nara, Missing in Action
Installation view of Yoshitomo Nara
Missing in Action, 1999 
Photo: Mark Blower 
Courtesy the artist and the Hayward Gallery

Yoshitomo Nara, Miss Margaret
Installation view of Yoshitomo Nara
Miss Margaret, 2016 
Photo: Mark Blower 
Courtesy the artist and the Hayward Gallery

The Hayward Gallery presents the first UK solo exhibition at a public art gallery by leading Japanese artist Yoshitomo Nara. The major retrospective invites viewers to immerse themselves in the intriguing world of one of today’s most celebrated artists through four decades of work, including recent paintings and drawings, as well as sculptures and iconic portraits brought to life through richly layered colours. Expanding on the blockbuster exhibition from the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, and Museum Frieder Burda, Baden-Baden, Yoshitomo Nara offers a window into the inner-workings of the artist, providing an insight into how Nara’s life experiences are intrinsically linked to his output through core themes and motifs.

Yoshitomo Nara is best-known for his striking images of child-like figures and animals with large heads and wide eyes that challenge viewers with their direct gaze and defiant stance. Both captivating and ominous, these characters exemplify Nara’s distinctive style that is recognised across the world. Although primarily a painter, he also works with a variety of materials across collage, sculpture, drawing, and installation to explore ideas of home, isolation, nature, peace, resistance and freedom.

Yoshitomo Nara Art
Installation view of Yoshitomo Nara 
at the Hayward Gallery 
Photo: Mark Blower
Courtesy the artist and the Hayward Gallery

Yoshitomo Nara Art
Installation view of Yoshitomo Nara 
at the Hayward Gallery 
Photo: Mark Blower
Courtesy the artist and the Hayward Gallery

Yoshitomo Nara Sculpture
Installation view of Yoshitomo Nara 
at the Hayward Gallery 
Photo: Mark Blower
Courtesy the artist and the Hayward Gallery

Yoshitomo Nara Art
Installation view of Yoshitomo Nara 
at the Hayward Gallery 
Photo: Mark Blower
Courtesy the artist and the Hayward Gallery

Yoshitomo Nara Art
Installation view of Yoshitomo Nara 
at the Hayward Gallery 
Photo: Mark Blower
Courtesy the artist and the Hayward Gallery

Yoshitomo Nara Sculpture
Installation view of Yoshitomo Nara 
at the Hayward Gallery 
Photo: Mark Blower
Courtesy the artist and the Hayward Gallery

Organised thematically, the exhibition provides a comprehensive overview of Yoshitomo Nara’s artistic evolution, illuminating his deep interest in humanity with works inspired by the people, emotions and places that he has encountered throughout his life.

Nara’s formative years in Japan’s northern Tōhoku region were spent drawing and listening to the Far East Network (FEN): the radio station for American troops stationed in Japan during the Vietnam War. Throughout the retrospective, viewers can see how Nara’s art often draws from his lifelong love of music, ranging from the antiwar folksongs by American singer-songwriters heard on FEN, to the melancholy sounds of the blues and, more recently, punk and new wave.

Studying and living in Germany also proved crucial in establishing Nara’s style. Upon visiting Germany in 1980, he discovered the masters of European modernism, the early Middle Ages and the Renaissance which influenced his later works. Enrolling at the Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf, Yoshitomo Nara was unable to speak German and used his art to express himself, utilising techniques learnt from Neo-Expressionist artist A. R. Penck. Nara’s big-eyed characters were created in this period, with early works like Ships in Girl (1992) countering the popular Japanese kawaii (cute) style through their mysterious expressions and rebellious demeanour.

Yoshitomo Nara Art Under the Tree
Yoshitomo Nara
Under the Tree, 2006 
Acrylic and colored pencil on corrugated board, 
30.5 x 23.8 cm
Courtesy of the artist

Yoshitomo Nara Art Fire
Yoshitomo Nara
Fire, 2009 
Acrylic on wood, 90 x 90cm
Courtesy of the artist and Yuichi Kawasaki Collection

Yoshitomo Nara Art Power in a Union
Yoshitomo Nara 
Power in a Union, 2024
Acrylic on wood, 104.5 x 90.7 x 6 (1.2) cm
Courtesy the artist

Yoshitomo Nara Art Banging the Drum
Yoshitomo Nara 
Banging the Drum, 2020
Acrylic and colored pencil on corrugated board, 
186 x 121.5 cm
Courtesy the artist and private collection

The exhibition highlights the political and societal discourse within Nara’s work, with disasters such as the Tōhoku earthquake, tsunami and Fukushima Daiichi power plant failure fueling his artistic response to the widespread feelings of loss and pain caused by these events. Works like From the Bomb Shelter (2017), which shows a child tentatively emerging from an underground bunker, reflect his changed viewpoint of the world. Meanwhile, recent paintings such as Midnight Tears (2023) emanate uncertainty through the ethereal, fragmented touches of colour and tear-filled eyes of the child it depicts.
Yung Ma, Senior Curator of the Hayward Gallery, says: “We have the tendency to overuse the word ‘iconic’ but in the case of Yoshitomo Nara, I can hardly think of a more apt description. Nara’s wide-eyed figures have become some of the most recognised motifs in contemporary art. His work engages with us emotionally, exemplifying how the power of art can transcend beyond the walls of a gallery to reach people far and wide.”

Ralph Rugoff, Director of the Hayward Gallery, says: “‘Rendered in an appealing and deceptively simple style, Nara’s portraits of imaginary characters evince a psychological immediacy that bridges the gap between high art and popular culture. Conveying a compelling tenderness that speaks to our desire for connection, his pictures also tap into widespread feelings of alienation, anxiety, and resistance. This is a rare achievement and it has made him one of the pivotal figures in contemporary art over the past 30 years.’”
Yoshitomo Nara is curated by Hayward Gallery Senior Curator, Yung Ma, with Assistant Curator, Katie Guggenheim, and Curatorial Assistant, Charlotte dos Santos.

HAYWARD GALLERY
Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, London 

30/10/24

Taguchi Art Collection + Hirosaki Museum of Contemporary Art - How Did You Come into the World? @ Hirosaki Museum of Contemporary Art and four McDonald’s in Hirosaki city

Taguchi Art Collection + Hirosaki Museum of Contemporary Art
How Did You Come into the World?
Hirosaki Museum of Contemporary Art
and four McDonald’s in Hirosaki city
September 27, 2024 - March 9, 2025

Janaina TSCHÄPE 
Xicletoformis Pluralis, 2005
Collection of Taguchi Art Collection
© Janaina Tschäpe - Courtesy of nca | nichido contemporary art

SHIOTA CHiharu
 
How did you come into the World?, 2012
Collection of Taguchi Art Collection and Taguchi Art Foundation
© JASPAR, Tokyo, 2024 and Chiharu Shiota 

Mika ROTTENBERG
 
Cosmic Generator (Garland Variant), 2019
Collection of Taguchi Art Collection and Taguchi Art Foundation
© Mika Rottenberg, Courtesy of the artist and Hauser & Wirth

Maurizio CATTELAN 
Untitled (Elevator), 2001
Collection of Taguchi Art Collection and Taguchi Art Foundation
Photo: Attilio Maranzano / Courtesy Maurizio Cattelan's Archive
and Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin

Artists: Camille HENROT, YIN Xiuzhen, AES+F, Tracey EMIN, OSGEMEOS, Jacco OLIVIER, Miriam CAHN, KATAYAMA Mari, Maurizio CATTELAN, KATO Izumi, KANEUJI Teppei, Maureen GALLACE, Kyun-Chome, Ged QUINN, KUSAMA Yayoi, Tuan Andrew NGUYEN, Oska GUTHEIL, KUDO Makiko, KONOIKE Tomoko, Tomás SARACENO, SHIOTA Chiharu, SUPERFLEX, SUGITO Hiroshi, TAKATA Fuyuhiko, TAKAHASHI Kiyoshi, TAKAYAMA Akira, Janaina TSCHÄPE, CHIBA Masaya, Vajiko CHACHKHIANI, Sebastián DÍAZ MORALES, NARA Yoshitomo, NISHIMURA Yu, Petrit HALILAJ, Ulla von BRANDENBURG, FUJIKURA Asako, Keegan McHARGUE, Ad MINOLITI, YANG Haegue, Gabriel RICO, Pipilotti RIST, Gosette LUBONDO, Mika ROTTENBERG, WATANABE Go, WADA Reijiro. Video Screening: Hans OP DE BEECK, Yinka SHONIBARE CBE, MOON Kyungwon & JEON Joonho, YAMASHIRO Chikako

How do we enter this world, and to what do we aspire as we live in it?

The world today is drenched in conflict and division, sparked by fear of things and others beyond our understanding. Some of these endless troubles, like wars, occur at the level of nations, while others lurk in writing on the internet, or in trifling conversations at school or workplace as we go about our usual routines. Facing daunting difficulties that make daily life a struggle, we embark on various courses of action. These might include communing with those around to make the place we live a better place; changing how society works so that people who think differently, can coexist in the same place; traveling or relocating to learn different ways of thinking, and acquire different wisdom; and when all else fails, becoming migrants or refugees, and fleeing. Such are the ways we use to gain happiness, and encountering a safe haven and likeminded souls, and finding our true self, may well be the reason we were born into this world.

Featuring over 40 artists and artist units from across the globe, this exhibition contains works from the Taguchi Art Collection, one of Japan’s leading contemporary art collections, and the holdings of the Hirosaki Museum of Contemporary Art, plus a number of new works.

Mika Rottenberg, who opens portals from familiar spaces into alternative worlds; Tuan Andrew Nguyen, whose videos superimpose disturbing history on lyrical travelogue imagery; the rock cafe and works of Nara Yoshitomo offering a glimpse into a facet of Hirosaki’s past; Katayama Mari, who engages with the world via her body; and the title work by Shiota Chiharu, are joined by a project by Takayama Akira unfolding on the streets, in an exhibition that ponders the nature of living and happiness, through a diverse lineup ranging from painting and photography, to film and performances in lecture format. 

YIN Xiuzhen 
Portable City : Hirosaki, 2020,
Collection of Hirosaki Museum of Contemporary Art
© Yin Xiuzhen
Photo: Naoya Hatakeyama

Exhibition Highlights

Access to the multifaceted appeal of community-focused contemporary art
The Taguchi Art Collection contains a diverse selection of some 700 (as of April 2024) artworks by Japanese and overseas artists. Acquired specifically for public display, the collection is composed of not just paintings but works in a variety of other materials and formats, including sculpture, photographs, and video. Another significant feature of the Taguchi Art Collection is its proactive approach to learning, starting with the “Art Delivery” outreach program that takes works from the collection to elementary and middle schools around Japan. In recent years numerous works have been added by artists who specifically address issues in today’s society, testament to the Collection’s openness to a world inhabited by many different kinds of people, and its ongoing evolution. This exhibition showcases the wide-ranging appeal of the Taguchi Art Collection, alongside works from the Hirosaki Museum of Contemporary Art holdings.

SUGITO Hiroshi 
Dancing Man, 2007
Collection of Taguchi Art Collection and Taguchi Art Foundation
© Hiroshi Sugito, Courtesy of Tomio Koyama Gallery
Photo: Shigeo Muto

About the Taguchi Art Collection: The Taguchi Art Collection consists of contemporary art from around the world collected by Taguchi Hiroshi, founder of Misumi Group Inc. Since 2013 his daughter Taguchi Miwa has been involved in managing the collection, taking over the administration of its ever-expanding holdings. Among the first to actively seek out works not only from Japan and the West, but also those of artists in Asia, Latin America, and Africa, thanks to its quality and diversity the Taguchi Art Collection is rated internationally as one of Japan’s finest contemporary art collections. In 2020 the Taguchi Art Foundation was established to further advance the Collection’s valuable work for public benefit. Recently, training of the next generation of specialists has also commenced, including overseas assignments for curators. 
Taguchi Art Collection Official Website: https://taguchiartcollection.jp

TAKAYAMA Akira / Port B 
McDonald's Radio University, Frankfurt, 2017
Collection of Taguchi Art Collection and Taguchi Art Foundation
Courtesy of MISA SHIN GALLERY
Photo: Masahiro Hasunuma

KATAYAMA Mari 
bystander #014, 2016
Collection of Taguchi Art Collection
© Mari Katayama

McDonald’s Radio University at four Hirosaki McDonald’s restaurants
The latest iteration of the McDonald’s Radio University art project by Takayama Akira, founder and head of theater unit Port B, is held at four McDonald’s restaurants in Hirosaki. McDonald’s Radio University turns the ubiquitous McDonald’s into a place where people can learn about a specialist subject, in the manner of a university, and has been an ongoing project for Takayama at McDonald’s and galleries around the world since 2017. The “professors” are people who have left their home countries for some reason as refugees or migrants, with the “student” audience able to access lectures on their smartphones at the McDonald’s. The idea is that hearing the thoughts and experiences of refugees and migrants from around the world will encourage people of different backgrounds to come together in a single, multicultural community. In addition to new lectures by “professors” Takayama met in Hirosaki, visitors are able to hear previous lectures from various locations.

Yoshitomo NARA
Recreation of the Rock Café "33 1/3" 
Installation view of "Yoshitomo Nara: The Beginning Place" 
Aomori Museum of Art, 2023-2024
Collection of Yoshitomo Nara Foundation 
Photo: Keizo Kioku

Re-creation of handmade rock cafe that sparked Nara Yoshitomo’s creative career
“How Did You Come into the World?” features work by artist and Hirosaki native Nara Yoshitomo, plus a recreation of the “33 1/3” rock cafe Nara built with friends while at high school. The place that opened Nara’s eyes to the vast world outside his own, this cafe, as unveiled last year in “Yoshitomo Nara: A Beginning Place” at the Aomori Museum of Art, was to form the foundation of his creative career. It was also a place that brought people of all ages together through music, in the process fostering enriching, non-hierarchical ways of relating. Here the rock cafe symbolizes the places of belonging/homes that we make with family and friends.

Hirosaki Museum of Contemporary Art 
2-1 Yoshino-cho, Hirosaki City, Aomori

02/06/24

Phillips' Editions, Photographs & Design Hong Kong Auction - Highlights

Editions, Photographs, and Design Auction  
Phillips Hong Kong  
Auction: 14 June 2024
Exhibition: 5 - 14 June 2024

Keith Haring
Keith Haring
Dog (L. pp. 48-49), 1986-87 
Estimate: HK$500,000 - 700,000/ US$64,100-89,700
Photo courtesy of Phillips

Andy Warhol
Andy Warhol
Shoes (F. & S. II.257), 1980
Estimate: HK$500,000 - 700,000/ US$64,100-89,700
Photo courtesy of Phillips

Damien Hirst
Damien Hirst
The Virtues (H9), 2021 
Estimate: HK$600,000-800,000/ US$76,900-103,000
Photo courtesy of Phillips

Phillips presents a new cross-category auction, Editions, Photographs, and Design, which will take place live in Hong Kong on 14 June. The inaugural sale will feature over 100 lots, ranging from an extensive selection of Editions by sought-after artists alongside emerging names; stand-out works by some of the world’s most celebrated visual artists and photographers, including the Asia auction debut of Steven Klein’s unique Polaroid works; and a diverse array of Design works spanning the 20th and 21st Centuries, including works from notable makers such as Thomas Heatherwick, Sofu Teshigahara, Studio Drift, among others. Ahead of the auction, the sale will be on view at Phillips’ Asia headquarters in Hong Kong’s West Kowloon Cultural District from 5 to14 June.
Nick Wilson, Head of Editions, Photographs and Design, Phillips Asia, said, “Phillips has a strong track record of selling these categories in our global auctions, we are excited to present them together in a dedicated sale, allowing us to not only meet buyer demand for broader collecting opportunities but also to formally offer sales across the full spectrum of Phillips' categories in Asia for the first time. As a good place to start for collecting fine art, Editions (prints and multiples) are typically more affordable than unique paintings and sculpture, but usually require highly complicated techniques with a master printer to create an edition. Photographs is also one of the more accessible types of work to add to an art collection. The most appealing attraction behind photography collecting is that it’s an approachable medium that people can immediately relate to whether it be a landscape, cityscape, portrait,or any other theme they gravitate to. Iconic Photographs and Editions by some of the world’s most sought-after artists continue to increase in popularity around the world. Our Design category has been very well received by collectors in Asia, in which the Design session featured in the 20th Century & Contemporary Art & Design Day Sale in Hong Kong from 2016 to 2022 always achieved a high sell through rate. We are delighted to present such a strong selection of works by a wide range of creators in the inaugural sale this summer and look forward to welcoming everyone through our galleries when the exhibition opens to the public on 5 June.”
HIGHLIGHTS FROM EDITIONS

Leading the Editions section is Keith Haring’s 'Dog' (L. pp. 48-49) from 1986-87, featuring his celebrated barking dog motif which originated in the artist’s New York subway drawings of the early 1980s. Another standout highlight by Pop Art pioneers is Andy Warhol’s iconic Shoes (F. & S. II.257), from 1980 with diamond dust, which epitomizes his fascination with glamour and celebrity. Also on offer is Damien Hirst’s complete set of The Virtues (H9), which is inspired by Bushidō, the Japanese samurai code of ethics.

Yoshitomo Nara
Yoshitomo Nara
Walk On (M. & S. E-2010-012), 2010
Estimate: HK$300,000-500,000/ US$38,500-64,100
Photo courtesy of Phillips

Yayoi Kusama
Yayoi Kusama
Pumpkin (White Y) (K. 150), 1992
Estimate: HK$300,000 - 500,000/ US$38,500-64,100
Photo courtesy of Phillips

Jonas Wood
Jonas Wood
Fish Pot; Matisse Pot 4; and Snoopy Pot, 2019-2020
Estimate: HK$400,000-600,000/ US$51,300-76,900
Photo courtesy of Phillips

Further sale highlights include Yoshitomo Nara’s Walk On (M. & S. E-2010-012), a Ukiyo-e woodcut which depicts Nara’s iconic little girl with almond shaped eyes and a menacing smile set in a hard straight line. Yayoi Kusama’s Pumpkin (White Y) (K. 150) brings together three of Kusama’s most recognisable motifs: a pumpkin, dots, and infinity nets. Additional works on offer include Jonas Wood’s Fish Pot; Matisse Pot 4; and Snoopy Pot. Jonas Wood’s incorporation of ceramic vessels into his body of work stems from his collaborative working relationship with his wife, the ceramic artist Shio Kusaka.

HIGHLIGHTS FROM PHOTOGRAPHS

Phillips is pleased to present ULTIMATE STEVEN KLEIN for the Photographs section. Steven Klein is one of the most innovative and provocative artists in photography and film. A highly sought-after figure, he has landed coveted covers of magazines such as Vogue and W with his riveting body of work being featured globally and has shot high-profile advertising campaigns for the likes of Alexander McQueen, Tom Ford and Dior. This exclusive curation of 18 unique Polaroids from the celebrated photographer’s archive was personally chosen by Steven Klein and marks the first time his works are being offered in Asia. Showcasing Klein’s distinctive approach to photography as a means of storytelling, this exceptional grouping offers a window into the intimate relationship between photographer and subject. Taken between 1999 and 2015, the Polaroids feature striking portraits of icons in fashion, music, and film, including Angelina Jolie, Brad Pitt, Britney Spears, David Bowie, Madonna, Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell and Claudia Schiffer, among others.

Steven Klein
Steven Klein
Kate Moss, New York City, 8 May 2003 
Estimate: HK$50,000-70,000/ US$6,400-9,000
Photo courtesy of Phillips

Steven Klein
Steven Klein 
Justin Bieber, Los Angeles, 4 June 2015 
Estimate: HK$20,000-30,000/ US$2,600-3,800
Photo courtesy of Phillips

Steven Klein
Steven Klein 
Madonna, Los Angeles from Confessions 
on a Dance Floor, 11 August 2005 
Estimate: HK$50,000-70,000/ US$6,400-9,000
Photo courtesy of Phillips

Other notable highlights include Francis Giacobetti’s 1988 Zebra #17, which demonstrates the artist’s unorthodox approach to technique, light and shadow and expresses the full beauty of the human body. Moreover, a print from Tim Parchikov’s Burning News, shows a person clutching a burning newspaper in the snow, which explores how humans react when the flow of information reaches a critical point.

Francis Giacobetti
Francis Giacobetti
Zebra #17, 1988
Estimate: HK$150,000 – 200,000/ US$19,200-25,600
Photo courtesy of Phillips

Tim Parchikov
Tim Parchikov
Burning News, 2011
Estimate: HK$100,000 – 150,000/ US$12,800- 19,200
Photo courtesy of Phillips

HIGHLIGHTS FROM DESIGN 

The Design section will showcase a diverse range of works spanning the 20th and 21st Centuries, led by Sofu Teshigahara’s Six-panel folding screen. With forms and lines inspired by the dynamism of nature, the present work immediately strikes for its calligraphic, gestural and sculptural brushstrokes, reminiscent of traditional Chinese landscape as well as calligraphy. Further highlights include a seating structure made from a single piece of aluminium titled “Extrusion” bench by the multi-award-winning British architect Thomas Heatherwick, who designed Hong Kong’s Pacific Place; Studio Drift’s 'Fragile Future 3.12' explores the unexpected connection between nature and technology, and Alvar Aalto’s Early “Paimio” armchair, model no 41, whose work brought a refreshing breath of humanism to modern design.

Sofu Teshigahara
Sofu Teshigahara
Six-panel folding screen, circa 1970
Estimate: HK$250,000 – 350,000/ US$32,100-44,900
Photo courtesy of Phillips

Thomas Heatherwick
Thomas Heatherwick
‘Extrusion’ bench, 2011
Estimate: HK$250,000 – 350,000/ US$32,100-44,900
Photo courtesy of Phillips

Studio Drift
Studio Drift
'Fragile Future 3.12', 2017
Estimate: HK$150,000 – 250,000/ US$19,200-32,100
Photo courtesy of Phillips

Alvar Aalto
Alvar Aalto
Early ‘Paimio’ armchair, model no 41, circa 1933
Estimate: HK$80,000 – 120,000/ US$10,300-15,400
Photo courtesy of Phillips

PHILLIPS' Editions, Photographs and Design Hong Kong Auction 
Auction: 14 June 2024, 2pm HKT
Public Exhibition: 5 - 14 June, 11am – 7pm HKT
Location: G/F, WKCDA Tower, West Kowloon Cultural District, No. 8 Austin Road West, Kowloon, Hong Kong

PHILLIPS

23/11/23

Yoshitomo Nara @ Pace, Genève - Exposition "The Bootleg Drawings 1988 - 2023"

Yoshitomo Nara
The Bootleg Drawings 1988 - 2023
Pace Gallery, Genève
17 novembre 2023 – 29 février 2024

Yoshitomo Nara
© Yoshitomo Nara, avec l'aimable autorisation de la Pace Gallery

Pace présente, dans sa galerie de Genève, un tour d’horizon des dessins réalisés par Yoshitomo Nara. Il s'agit de la toute première exposition solo de l'artiste en Suisse. Retraçant plus de trente années de sa carrière, Yoshitomo Nara: The Bootleg Drawings, rassemble près de 200 oeuvres sur papier influencées par la politique, le mouvement punk rock, la musique folk, la contre-culture des années 60 ainsi que les souvenirs personnels de l’artiste, ses expériences remontant à l’enfance et les années durant lesquelles il vécu en Allemagne. 

Pour cette exposition, Yoshitomo Nara a choisi une sélection d'oeuvres inédites. Pris individuellement, chaque dessin présenté apporte un éclairage sur les sensibilités esthétiques de l’artiste et son approche vis-à-vis de l’art figuratif à divers moments de sa vie. Sous une forme de groupes, ces oeuvres présentent une image profondément personnelle de sa carrière à travers le prisme d’un média singulier.

Créés sur des carnets et des matériaux trouvés allant du carton ondulé jusqu’à des enveloppes en passant par des journaux, les dessins spontanés de Yoshitomo Nara, représentant des jeunes silhouettes, des animaux anthropomorphes, des paroles de chanson ainsi que des mots chocs, constituent des reflets intrinsèquement intimes de son paysage psychologique. Entre les mains de Yoshitomo Nara, les marqueurs esthétiques de la jeunesse, tels que les grandes têtes et les yeux larges, font émerger des émotions et des états psychiques complexes, de rebelle et réfractaire à calme, contemplatif et solitaire. 

L’artiste commença à crayonner dans sa petite enfance, s’exerçant pendant les cours, lors du trajet de l’école à la maison et également dans sa maison d’enfance dans la ville semi-rurale d’Hirosaki au nord du Japon. Depuis son enfance, la musique a toujours représenté une force extrêmement importante et exercé une grande influence sur le travail et la vie de Yoshitomo Nara. Il avait acheté son premier album à l’âge de huit ans avant de toujours percevoir la musique comme indissociable de son processus de réalisation de dessins, les sons de ses disques transfigurant ses idées et sentiments en images sur la page.

Les plus anciens dessins figurant dans l’exposition de Yoshitomo Nara à Genève remontent à l’année 1988 au cours de laquelle il déménagea en Allemagne pour être élève à l’Académie des beaux-arts de Düsseldorf. Il y étudia sous l’égide de l’artiste A.R Penck, lequel le poussa à combiner ses pratiques du dessin et de la peinture, un moment clé dans le développement de son style unique. Des figurations audacieuses de Yoshitomo Nara de 1989 sélectionnées et visibles au sein de l’exposition de Pace reflètent la brutale rudesse du travail de Penck. En s’écartant des compositions quadrillées de parties composites en faveur de sujets et de motifs singuliers placés sur des arrière-plans aplanis, ces œuvres incarnent un prélude au changement d’orientation significatif qui interviendra dans le style pictural de Yoshitomo Nara quelques années plus tard : de grandes têtes arrondies apposées à des arrière-plans unis. 

Au cœur de la vaste pratique artistique de Yoshitomo Nara, laquelle englobe la peinture, la photographie, les installations à grande échelle ainsi que la sculpture, le dessin est le médium à travers lequel il exprime son humour ainsi que ses sensibilités introspectives de la manière la plus vive. Ponctuées de paroles de chanson et de slogans, des images figuratives de skateurs, de sirènes et de joueurs de guitare s’adressent aux rêveries personnelles en roue libre de l’artiste. Pour Yoshitomo Nara, dessiner est un acte de recherche et d’expérimentation viscéralement propre à soi-même aussi bien au niveau des idées que des processus techniques. 

Cette exposition à la Pace Gallery a lieu alors que se tient une grande exposition solo des oeuvres de Yoshitomo Nara au Musée d’art d’Aomori au Japon, du 14 octobre 2023 au 25 février 2024.

Yoshitomo Nara (né en 1959 à Hirosaki, Aomari, Japon), figure pionnière de l'art contemporain, a étudié au Japon puis en Allemagne, où il a commencé à faire la synthèse de la culture populaire japonaise et occidentale, de l'art médiéval et du néo-expressionnisme. Au début des années 1990, Nara est parvenu à son style mature, représentant des enfants avec des attitudes allant de menaçantes à exubérantes en passant par pensibles. Influencé par la musique populaire et les souvenirs d'enfance, il filtre ces références à travers un domaine exploratoire de sentiments, la solitude et la rébellion en particulier, couvrent des sensibilités autobiographiques et culturelles plus larges.

PACE GALLERY GENEVE
Quai des Bergues 15-17, 1201 Genève

02/10/23

Phillips' 20th Century & Contemporary Art Hong Kong Sales - Artists & Artworks Hightlights

Phillips 20th Century & Contemporary Art Hong Kong Sales
6 - 7 October 2023

Yoshitomo Nara
Yoshitomo Nara
No Means No, 2006 
Acrylic on canvas, 162.5 x 130.8 cm.
© Yoshitomo Nara, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$52,000,000-72,000,000/ US$6,670,000- 9,230,000

Phillips presents their Hong Kong Sales of 20th Century & Contemporary Art. The Evening Sale will take place on 6 October, and the Day Sale will take place on 7 October at the company’s new Asia Headquarters in the West Kowloon Cultural District. Featuring an exceptional group of Modern works by 20th Century Chinese masters, alongside lots by Post-War, Contemporary and Ultra-Contemporary artists, the sales represent a great depth of cross-category offerings to cater to the diversifying taste of today’s collectors. The public exhibition of the works opened on 28 September and is on view through 6 October. 

Jonathan Crockett, Chairman, Asia, Phillips, said, “Our carefully assembled Hong Kong Fall Auctions of 20th Century & Contemporary Art bring some of the rarest works from each artist’s oeuvre to the fore and continue to spotlight artists from around the world who are newer to the secondary market in Asia. To ensure that Asian artists get their deserved spotlight, this season, we have increased the proportion of works by Asian artists across Evening and Day Sales. Alongside the extraordinary work by Yoshitomo Nara leading the auctions, we have outstanding works by a broad spectrum of Asian masters including Liu Ye, Zao Wou-Ki, Cai-Guo Qiang, Lee Ufan, Chu Teh-Chun, Zeng Fanzhi, Yayoi Kusama, and Park Seo-Bo. Also standing in dialogue are works by a new generation of Asian artists such as Chris Huen Sin Kan, Fang Yuan, Oh de Laval and Elaine Chiu.” 

Leading Highlights from the Evening Sale

Danielle So, Head of Evening Sale, 20th Century & Contemporary Art, Phillips Hong Kong, said: “Having been crowned the most expensive living Japanese artist, works by Yoshitomo Nara continue to remain highly sought after, with his top 20 auction results having been achieved in the past four years alone. Phillips is delighted to offer another seminal work by the artist, following the strong results achieved by Lookin' for a Treasure this spring, Missing in Action in 2021, which set the second-highest auction price for his works, and Hothouse Doll in 2020. No Means No is part of a very small group of large canvases by Nara that have come to auction this year, underscoring the increasingly scarce supply of such large, full, and layered works, thus marking the present work as a rare offering.” 

The collaboration between Yoshitomo Nara and the design collective graf began in 2003 when the artist met one of its founders. Together they built a number of critically acclaimed exhibitions with massive installations of wooden houses that feature drawings, paintings and sculptures by Nara across the world. The interior of these houses were inspired by the artist’s studios in Japan, somewhat nomadic homes for Nara at an important time in his artistic career. The present work was featured in their 2007 exhibition in Berlin, Yoshitomo Nara + graf: Berlin Baracke, hosted by Galerie Zink. Nara’s most ambitious collaborative project with graf was A-Z –a series of 26 exhibitions, 26 wooden structures or ‘houses’ that responded to the particular environment of the exhibition venue or the local culture were installed. No Means No formed part of the project that was shown at the BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art in 2008, which marked the first show at a major public gallery in the United Kingdom for Nara + graf. 

Created in Nara’s signature ‘layered’ style in which gentle swathes of pastel hide behind a translucent layer of pearly white serving as the background, the present work features an iconic Nara girl staring ahead with massive eyes twinkling like galaxies. The artist has been titling some of his pieces No Means No from as early as the 1990s, and its earliest iteration appears within a 1991 work on paper now housed in the collection of the Aomori Museum of Art, featuring a crashing warplane with the titular words blazoned in red above the scene. In this context, the title carries pacifist undertones as is typical of the anti-war artist. 

Nicolas Party
Nicolas Party
Still Life with an Olive, 2012-2013
Oil on canvas, 143 x 186.5 cm.
© Nicolas Party, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$ 26,000,000 - 40,000,000/ US$ 3,330,000 - 5,130,000

Also among the Evening Sale’s highlights is Nicolas Party’s Still Life with an Olive. Shown at Party’s first major solo exhibition in the United Kingdom at the Modern Institute in Glasgow in 2013, the present work is one of only seven still life oil paintings made specially for this show, with each being created over a course of 10 to 20 months, during which Nicolas Party spends the time working and re-working his paintings, a  key element that is central to the iconography of painting as a medium. Featuring a vibrant palette of yellow, red, green, and blue within a harmonious composition, it exemplifies the artist’s dexterity in colour application as well as painterly precision. Familiar fruits and objects are transformed into larger-than-life, biomorphic shapes, demonstrating Nicolas Party’s playfulness with scale.

Nicolas Party’s top ten results at auction have all been set in the past three years, which is indicative of the continuing strength of the artist’s market. Similar to the present work, two of the artist’s top five results at auction are for still life arrangements of fruit.

Contemporary Chinese Masters 

Liu Ye
Liu Ye
The End of Baroque, 1998
Acrylic on canvas, 200 x 170 cm.
© Liu Ye, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$18,000,000 - 28,000,000/US$2,310,000-3,590,000

Among the Evening Sale highlights is Liu Ye’s monumental The End of Baroque. Its size is formidable and rare: less than 30 works of such height have come to auction, and none of this scale has been seen on the market this year. The visual lexicon of this work is undeniably rich and layered, as with the rest of Liu’s creations. Inexplicably, the view is surrealistically framed by white windows that swing out towards the vista outside. To our bottom left is a solitary figure who looks on, unperturbed by this seascape, surreal and catastrophically beautiful. Painted in 1998, a few years after the artist’s return to his native China, The End of Baroque signals the close of an era and the dawn of new beginnings.

Zao Wou-Ki
Zao Wou-Ki
10.05.76, 1976
Oil on canvas, 115.8 x 88.7 cm.
© Zao Wou-Ki, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$12,000,000 - 20,000,000/ US$1,540,000-2,560,000

The Evening Sale also includes a strong selection of abstract works by 20th Century Chinese masters, led by Zao Wou-Ki’s 10.05.76. Painted in 1976, the present work moves away from the signature central-axis composition of the Hurricane period and the wild, flowing style of cursive calligraphy that characterised the 1960s. In contrast to the rich colour layerings of Zao’s previous works, 10.05.76 heavily features hefty areas of earthy paint meticulously deployed with the artist’s new approach of evoking thin ink washes to achieve soft tonal gradations. In the early 1970s, Zao was advised by his friend the poet Henri Michaux to re-explore Chinese ink and paper, and to leave behind his preferred large format canvases with their vast expanses of space that demanded hours in the studio. In part to care for his increasingly bed-bound and ailing wife May (who passed away in 1972), in part due to his own inner-turmoil and desperation for a new creative outlet to distract himself. 

Cai Guo-Qiang
Cai Guo-Qiang
Ye Gong Hao Long (Mr. Ye Who Loves Dragons), 2003
Gunpowder on paper, in 5 parts, overall 400 x 1500 cm.
© Cai Guo-Qiang, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$9,000,000 - 14,000,000/ US$1,150,000-1,790,000

This summer, Cai Guo-Qiang’s work was the subject of his major retrospective exhibition in Tokyo. A spectacular example of the artist’s signature methodology, Cai’s Ye Gong Hao Long (Mr Ye Who Loves Dragons) offered in this season’s Evening Sale is one of two ‘gunpowder drawings’ produced during the Explosion Project for Tate Modern in London commemorating Chinese New Year in 2003. At once conceptual, performative, and visual, Ye Gong Hao Long (Mr Ye Who Loves Dragons) features a dragon caught mid-air, its undulating silhouette formed by blotches of ash and gunpowder, and it surpasses any categorial constraints, fluctuating between ephemerality and permanence. From the 1990s onwards, dragons have become a constant motif of Cai’s, and notably, the long, winding characteristic of his gunpowder paintings and explosions recall the traditional Chinese dragons, representing auspicious symbols of strength and fortune in the East. 

Auction Debut Season in Asia

A testament to the company’s reputation as the auction house for cutting-edge contemporary art, Phillips introduces several new names to the Asian market for the first time, including Ebecho Muslimova, Miriam Cahn, Robin F. Williams, Sarah Cunningham, Elaine Chiu, Honor Titus, and El Anatsui.

Robin F. Williams
Robin F. Williams
Leave Britney Alone, 2019
Oil on canvas, 109.2 x 152.4 cm. 
© Robin F. Williams, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$1,200,000 - 2,200,000/ US$154,000-282,000
Renowned for her vividly cerebral portraits of commanding female figures, Robin F. Williams' paintings explore the complex interplay between gender and power in American visual culture. Leave Britney Alone presented in this season’s Evening Sale is based on Britney Spears’ captivating performance of 'I’m a Slave 4 U' which headlined the 2001 MTV Video Music Awards. 
Ebecho Muslimova
Ebecho Muslimova
FATEBE SINKHOLE, 2020
Acrylic and oil on canvas, 152.4 x 243.8 cm.
© Ebecho Muslimova, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$250,000 - 450,000/ US$32,100-57,700
Making her first major auction debut, Ebecho Muslimova achieved recent acclaim after her solo exhibition in London and her first institutional show in New York in 2021. During her time as an undergraduate, the artist created Fatebe (Fat + Ebe [her nickname])—initially conceived as a caricature of herself to reflect the artist’s state of mind and the world around her. In her current practice, Fatebe has matured beyond a simple self-portrait and FATEBE SINKHOLE presented in the Evening Sale is a sardonic display of the female nude. 
Miriam Cahn
Miriam Cahn
o.t., 2017
Oil on canvas, 185 x 180 cm.
© Miriam Cahn, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$1,000,000 - 2,000,000/ US$128,000-256,000
Boldly unapologetic throughout her impressive career spanning across five decades, Swiss-born artist Miriam Cahn does not shy away from the depiction of controversial imagery in her thought-provoking body of work. Taking inspiration from the world around her under the influence of the feminist movements of the 1970s and 80s, Cahn’s enigmatic figurative canvases are often set in nightmarish dreamscapes, filled with visceral depictions of violence, horror, and tragedy.  o.t. offered in this season’s Evening Sale is a dazzling large-scale example of the artist’s multi-standing nude figures showcasing a powerful physical expression of violence and victimisation.
Sarah Cunningham
Sarah Cunningham
Lunar Phase, 2020
Oil on canvas, 179.8 x 130.1 cm.
© Sarah Cunningham, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$ 350,000 - 550,000/US$44,900-70,500
Born in 1993, British artist Sarah Cunningham has captured the attention of the art world, celebrated as an artistic force to be reckoned with for her gestural paintings of psychological landscapes imbued with poetic and intuitive approaches. Arresting in its stylistic virtuosity, Lunar Phase offered in the Day Sale is a prime example Cunningham’s semi-abstract landscapes composed of richly vibrant colours and expressive swirls of paint.
Elaine Chiu
Elaine Chiu
A Wonderful World, 2023
Acrylic on canvas, 115 x 145 cm.
© Elaine Chiu, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$40,000 - 60,000/ US$5,100-7,700
This season’s Day Sale marks Hong Kong artist Elaine Chiu’s international auction debut, with a brilliantly vibrant painting A Wonderful World created for the sale. At just 27 years old, she has already cemented an impressive reputation as one of the city’s most exciting young talents, with her impactful work earning her a coveted spot on Forbes’ 30 Under 30 Asia list for 2023 in the arts category.
Honor Titus
Honor Titus
Tom Hanks at Lassens, 2019
Oil on canvas, 218 x 180 cm.
© Honor Titus, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$300,000 - 450,000/ US$38,500-57,700
Also marking his auction debut in Asia in this season’s Day Sale is Honor Titus, a self-taught American artist whose paintings often depict faceless figures in minimal urban landscapes, reflecting the sense of isolation and loneliness that results from a condition of anonymity in the urban environment. 
El Anatsui
El Anatsui
Diaspora, 2012
Archival dyes printed on cotton, hand stitched, 135 x 135 cm.
© El Anatsui, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$200,000 - 300,000/ US$25,600-38,500
Regarded as one of the most significant living African artists working on the continent, the Ghanaian artist El Anatsui is the recipient of the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement of the 56th International Art Exhibition of the Biennale di Venezia, 2015. A wonderful editioned example of the Anatsui’s bottle cap tapestries, which the artist has devoted his artistic practice to since the late 1990s, Diaspora offered in this season’s Day Sale captures Anatsui’s signature wide, shimmering curtains in compact form. 

Other Highlights from the Day Sale

Zeng Fanzhi
Zeng Fanzhi
Landscape, 2005
Oil on canvas, 145 x 223 cm.
© Zeng Fanzhi, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$2,500,000 - 3,500,000/ US$321,000-449,000

Yayoi Kusama
Yayoi Kusama
A Field of Phantom, 1995
Acrylic on canvas, 16 x 23 cm.
© Yayoi Kusama, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$2,000,000 - 3,000,000/ US$256,000-385,000

Park Seo-Bo
Park Seo-Bo
Ecriture No.110507, 2011
Mixed media and Korean paper on canvas, 169 x 230.5 cm.
© Park Seo-Bo, courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$1,800,000 - 2,800,000/ US$231,000-359,000

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