Shingo TANAKA: THE VERGE OF AWARENESS |
Events |
Written by In the document |
Published: September 11 2011 |
In my dark studio, I light a flame. The works of Shingo Tanaka, without fail, involve “FIRE”. Tanaka has constantly evolved in creation employing fire. “Fire” has been an interesting theme for a number of artists in the history of art. “Fire” has been also a popular theme in artistic expressions in different media. But Tanaka’s works are without doubt totally unique. He separates his works into four different series: “TRACE”, “LIGHT”, “TRANS”, and “HEAT”. The theme of the current exhibition, On the Verge of Awareness, is announced in the color photographs of flames of the Trace series. Even though each work is as beautiful as a jewel, they also express the fear that fire produces. The works of this series, overlaying pyrotechnical events in time and space, contain images of flames from all directions reset on a single plane. These powerful works make one feel the overwhelming power of fire as well as the time and space in which flames exist. LIGHT In this series, Tanaka expresses flames in photography. In his last exhibition “Dreams and Reality” at eN arts in 2009, black and white photographs of the flaring flames were exhibited. The works in the LIGHT series capture the figures of the flames in the different stages, beginning to burn, bursting into a blaze, and fading out. Both of the actual flame started on the metal plate and its reflection are equally photographed as one figure. Co-existence of the real and the false flames in one photograph seems like a metaphor of the sense of mortality. This is Tanaka’s dynamic sculpture series. The works are created in a unique manner in which he combines the nature of the fire with simple materials, such as paper or wooden panels, to create sculptures. In contrast to the LIGHT series, his works in the TRANS series freeze both time and motion. But after the work is complete, we enjoy observing their transmutation over time caused by the frailty of the ashes, which are a significant part of each sculpture. Tanaka creates his works in this series by combining fire and the chemical reactions of paper and Shikkui (Japanese Plaster applied on walls of traditional Japanese houses). He creates a panel using a wood and Shikkui as if building a small wall. Then, with a torch, he begins to burn the surface of the panel. Depending on the duration of exposure, the strength of the fire, and his motions as he moves the torch, the textures, the colors and the motifs form differently on the Shikkui panels. Upon viewing the works of the HEAT series, the observer’s imagination builds from and beyond their own * The text provided by eN arts. Period: Friday, September 2 - Friday, September 30, 2011 |
Last Updated on September 02 2011 |