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Satoru AOYAMA: Artists Must Earnestly Make Six Roses in Their Lives
Events
Written by KALONSNET Editor   
Published: April 29 2011

2011, 42×32cm, photo by Kei Miyajima
Copyright © AOYAMA Satoru
Courtesy Mizuma Art Gallery

“Radical or conservative? Political or artistic? The last roses in an artist's life.”

Six red roses embroidered with a sewing machine: this is all there superficially is about this exhibition.

This exhibition consists in directly confront the rose's image as a bearer of multiple symbols, beautiful and stale at the same time. This is a new direction for which the artist opted after his Glitter Pieces series (2008 - ) reflecting Aoyama's concern for concepts such as “labor” or the dichotomy of notions such as politics and art, manual and mechanical industry, imagination and appropriation among others.

By declaring “I will never make roses again in my life as an artist,” Aoyama claims the original romantic intensity of art, but he also questions us about the value and assessment of “the art, or the artist”.

Will the artist's last roses bloom effectively in the present world?

AOYAMA Satoru - Profile
Born in 1973 in Tokyo. After graduating with a B.A. degree in textile from the Goldsmiths College's visual art department in 1998, he earned a M.F.A. from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2001. He actually lives and work in Tokyo. Recent exhibitions include his participation in “Roppongi Crossing 2010: Can There Be Art”, Mori Art Museum (Tokyo), “TWIST AND SHOUT : Contemporary Art from Japan”, Bangkok Art Center (Bangkok, Thailand) , and his solo show “COMPLEX CIRCUIT – Contact Zone 5 / Satoru AOYAMA”, Gallery αM (Tokyo). During the summer 2011, Aoyama will be part of the second Dojima River Biennale.

* The text provided by Mizuma Art Gallery.


Dates: June 8 - July 9, 2011
Venue: Mizuma Art Gallery

Last Updated on June 08 2011
 

Editor's Note by Mizuki TANAKA


2011, 42×32cm, photo by Kei Miyajima
Copyright © AOYAMA Satoru
Courtesy Mizuma Art Gallery

There are sic works displayed in the hall. The works seem pictures since these are each put in a flame. However, you might notice that these consist of detailed embroidery when closely seeing. It is sewing machine embroidery.
It is a little difficult to read the whole image of the work due to various concepts included. However, it is an exhibition that our ideas will be stimulated by the exquisite embroidery in front of our eyes.


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