Past Solo Exhibition

Shinro Ohtake: Paper – Sight 26.09.2016 — 05.11.2016

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Event has ended

26 September - 5 November 2016

About The Exhibition

STPI Gallery is pleased to present Paper – Sight by Japanese artist Shinro Ohtake, marking his extraordinary endeavour in print and papermaking. Against a vast oeuvre of drawings, collages, paintings, large-scale assemblage pieces, architectural projects and experimental noise bands; these print and paper explorations stand out as important feats that have led to the realization of new ideas.

This exhibition harks back to the basics of Ohtake’s practice, which consists of collecting, chronicling and re-presenting the contents of life and time. In other words, “a collaboration with ‘what’s already there.’” While his characteristic style of amassed content and “pasted pictures” remains largely apparent, recurrent themes and motifs of nature and found images culled from the artist’s daily life are effectively appropriated in new material, techniques and striking colour palettes, reshaping our experience of them.

The use of neon yellow is particularly striking in the gamut of colours and imagery here. Referencing uranium (“yellowcake”) and radiation, it emanates Ohtake’s preoccupation with a sense of life’s transience following the March 2011 Great East Japan earthquake and Fukushima disasters. As recordings of the event and subsequent radioactive contamination, the works are a response to concerns around nuclear energy, threats from nature, considerations of the earth and the universe, and relations between families and homes affected by the disaster.

Yet as writer H.G. Masters highlights, rather than projecting a specific narrative, Ohtake’s process of accumulating discarded urban materials to form a “compulsive and fragmented archive” stems from a deeper interest in the strands of time embodied in each material.

“The way I work strongly relates to a contemporary sense of the being of time. It’s not that there is always only ‘joy’ in the being of time or in the layering of time, but there is a ‘being of density’ connecting them to which I respond. This is a phenomenon that occurs in the relations between the time of the present flowing in different directions, at different speeds and at different depths, and the layers woven together by the time of the past, and the feelings and sensibilities of the people whose lives unfold within those layers.” – S.O.

As works like Book #1/Layered Memories and the Yellow sight series illustrate, it is this dense layering of multiple times existing in one moment that Ohtake seeks to capture beyond just mere recording of the times, as it were.

But this body of work also reflects the very core of his practice. Writer Tomoko Yabumae suggests that the procedures and implications of printmaking—the concept of establishing the “copy” as the “work,” rather than the “original” (mold/plate) itself—fittingly mirror Ohtake’s practice of working with ‘what’s already there,’ as he extracts his “work” from the world around us as they are. Printmaking, as such, has become a metaphor for his methodology as an artist.

At STPI, Ohtake investigated this relationship further in works like Black Wall, where vinyl records—themselves, prints or copies—act as plates for the transference of ink and imagery, as well as parts of the final work. This correlation is elaborated in the Indigo Forest series, where Ohtake works with ‘what is already there’ within him to create lithographs based on his memory of the forest in Kassel.

Through this expanded notion of printmaking, and a thoroughly bold and unapologetic body of work, Ohtake makes the existing material of the world visible once again, and grants to us a new way of looking at the world.

This exhibition is held in conjunction with SG50, commemorating the 50th anniversary of Singapore-Japan diplomatic relations, and made possible with the generous support of our Friends of STPI.

About the artist

Shinro Ohtake

Shinro Ohtake

Residency in 2015

Shinro Ohtake (b. 1955, Tokyo, Japan, based in Uwajima, Japan) collects, edits and reassembles found images and objects to create works that reflect layers of time and memory. Avoiding grand narratives, the artist leans into the idea of ‘working with what’s already there’, responding to cycles of production, consumption and waste in a culture of excess.

Travelling to London in the late 1970s was pivotal to Ohtake, who was immersed in its punk scene and introduced to 20th century art movements such as Dadaism, Surrealism and Pop Art. Upon his return to Tokyo in the 1980s, Ohtake gained recognition for his highly experimental approach to art-making. It reflected the cultural upheaval in post-war Japan at the time, from the rise of social activism to the influx of American pop culture. His Scrapbooks (1977–ongoing) series comprises densely bound scrapbooks created using fragments of magazines, photographs, receipts, posters, ticket stubs and other printed matter. Haphazardly layered over one another and often painted or scribbled on, these colourful, explosive collages take on a sculptural quality and act as visual archives of the artist’s lived experience.

Ohtake obtained his BFA in Oil Painting from Musashino Art University, Tokyo in 1980. His work is found in major collections including Museum of Modern Art, New York; Minneapolis Institute of Art; Dallas Museum of Art; Victoria & Albert Museum, London; M+, Hong Kong; Queensland Art Gallery and Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane; Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo; The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo; Fukuyama Museum of Art; Benesse Art Site Naoshima; and Fukuoka Art Museum.

Notable solo exhibitions include Shinro Ohtake (2022), The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo; BLDG. 1978-2019 (2019), Contemporary Art Museum, Kumamoto and Contemporary Art Center, Art Tower Mito; Okusoku – Velocity of Memory (2013), Takamatsu City Museum of Art; NEWNEW (2013), Marugame Genichiro-Inokuma Museum of Contemporary Art; Shinro Ohtake (2012), Art Sonje Center, Seoul; New Universe on the Road (2007), Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art and Fukuoka Art Museum; Zen-Kei: Retrospective 1955-2006 (2006), Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo. The artist has also participated in major international festivals including Pacific Century—E Hoʻomau no Moananuiākea (2022), 1st Hawai‘i Triennial, Honolulu; Restoration of the Sea (2019), 4th Setouchi Triennale, Kagawa; APT9 (2018), 9th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art, Brisbane; 3rd Setouchi Triennale (2016), Kagawa; Art Fahrenheit 451 (2014), 5th Yokohama Triennale; The Encyclopedic Palace (2012), 55th Venice Biennale; and 10,000 Lives (2010), 8th Gwangju Biennale.

Ohtake had his residency at the STPI Workshop in 2015, resulting in the exhibition Paper – Sight (2016).

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