TOKYO.- Blum & Poe is presenting a solo exhibition of Tokyo-based painter Kazumi Nakamura. This is Nakamuras third solo show with the gallery and the first to focus on his works on paper, an aspect of his practice that he has rarely exhibited.
This exhibition puts Nakamuras paintings on paper in dialogue with corresponding works on canvas, drawn from several ongoing series made since the 1980s. These juxtapositions reveal the sequential, iterative manner in which Nakamura paints, producing innumerable variations within a consistent compositional structure. Many of the paintings on paper are dated to the day they were made, offering an almost diaristic insight into the artists state of mind while at work. Nakamura has termed the variations and discrepancies that emerge between several works in a series as differential images. His method of painting a predetermined motif repeatedly over time emerged amid the New Painting milieu in Japan, which developed in parallel with Neo-Expressionism in the United States and Europe. His practice consists of several distinct but interrelated bodies of work that reinterpret East Asian motifs and depictions of pictorial space by filtering them through the visual language of American Modernism. Simultaneously, Nakamura counters the dominant discourse of Euro-American painting by localizing it in a Japanese vernacular.
This exhibition includes rare early examples of the Y-shape and Diagonal Grid series, which originated in the 1980s. The Y-shape refers to the symbol used to denote mulberry fields in Japanese cartography. For Nakamura, this formalistic interpretation of natural topography is loaded with profound personal and sociopolitical meanings, both evoking the trees that surrounded his family home and the historical decline of sericulturean industry that his mothers family had been engaged in until the 1960s. On the other hand, the geometric abstraction of the Diagonal Grid paintings is a reinterpretation of the diagonal perspectives seen in ancient Japanese scroll paintings. In contrast with the frontal, vertical-horizontal grids that characterize Western Modernisms emphasis on the artwork as a self-contained autonomous object, Nakamuras diagonal grids generate meaning by diverting the viewers gaze toward the outside of the composition.
Avian forms are a recurring motif in two series featured prominently in this exhibition: Shokusocho 織桑鳥 (Phoenix) and A Bird in its Existence, both begun in the 2000s. In these thickly textured paintings, Nakamura shifts from the logical grid to emotional abstraction, employing the semiotic outline of abstract birds to indicate the unstable ambiguity of existence. Nakamura coined the neologism shokusocho (織桑鳥) by combining the Japanese characters for weave, mulberry, and bird as a personalized interpretation of the phoenix. Different mythologies of this otherworldly bird can be found in both ancient Egyptian and Chinese history. Since the 19th century, the myth of the Egyptian phoenix has filtered into Japanese culture, and is often discussed in parallel with the Chinese Phoenix, which carries auspicious meaning. For Nakamura, these birds' ability to regenerate after death has a strong emotional resonance with his lived history, echoing the decline of sericulture and symbolizing his wish for all things that have decayed to achieve rebirth. Similarly, Nakamura was inspired to make the A Bird in its Existence paintings while climbing a mountain and seeing a bird swoop down from its peak, prompting the artist to contemplate the potential of flight as a means for humankind and all other beings to overcome malevolent and tragic conditions. The compositions of these paintings feature a recurring Yreferring to the symbolism of his earlier workbased primarily on five core matrices (which he also refers to as mother types) drawn from prototypical bird images. These images, found in Korean folk painting, Archaeopteryx fossils, or in Chinese characters that incorporate bird radicals allow Nakamura to create paintings of unlimited differentiation, as the artist writes.
Kazumi Nakamura (b. 1956, Chiba, Japan) currently lives and works in Hidaka City, near Tokyo. He entered the Tokyo University of the Arts with the intention to study art theory but soon found himself studying under Mono-ha artist Kōji Enokura, a mentor who encouraged him to focus on creating art. During the past four decades, he has exhibited throughout Europe, the Middle East, and East Asia, with solo museum exhibitions including a large-scale retrospective at the National Art Center, Tokyo, Japan (2014); Iwaki City Art Museum, Iwaki City, Japan (2002); and Sezon Museum of Modern Art, Nagano, Japan (1999).
Previously, Nakamura was featured in Parergon: Japanese Art of the 1980s and 1990s, a two-part survey exhibition curated by Mika Yoshitake and held at Blum & Poe, Los Angeles, in 2019. He has also participated in numerous other distinguished group exhibitions including The Marvellous Cacophony, 57th October Salon, Belgrade, Serbia (2018); Imago Mundi, Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NY (2016); Re: Quest―Japanese Contemporary Art since the 1970s, Museum of Art, Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea (2013); Japan Today, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebæk, Denmark (1995); Allegory of Seeing, Sezon Museum of Art, Tokyo, Japan (1995); Japanese Art after 1945: Scream against the Sky, Yokohama Museum of Art, Yokohama, Japan (1994); and JAPAN 89, Municipal Museum of Contemporary Art Ghent, Belgium (1989). His work is featured in numerous institutional collections, including Busan Museum of Art, Busan, South Korea; Hara Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo, Japan; Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo, Japan; National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, Japan; National Museum of Art, Osaka, Japan; Rachofsky Collection, Dallas, TX; Reykjavík Art Museum, Reykjavík, Iceland; Sezon Museum of Modern Art, Nagano, Japan; Toyota Municipal Museum of Art, Toyota, Japan; and the Yokohama Museum of Art, Yokohama, Japan.
Blum & Poe Los Angeles and Tokyo are currently open by appointment only.