黑料不打烊


Gallery Selection

Jul 05, 2023 - Aug 26, 2023

Gallery Koyanagi is pleased to present the exhibition 鈥淕allery selection鈥 from Wednesday, July 5 to Saturday, August 26, 2023. This exhibition will feature Thomas Ruff's latest series "d.o.pe.," in which he printed the composed 鈥榝ractal鈥 patterns onto the industrial carpet, and Haim Steinbach鈥檚 鈥淪panish dancer鈥 with a Degas statuette incorporated in a wooden wall box. Also on view is "OPTICKS" by Hiroshi Sugimoto, the artist鈥檚 first color photo series that captured the sunlight dispersed into the array of colors through a prism, and 鈥淪easide鈥 by Akiko Hashimoto reinstalled her drawing into the furniture.

From 1977 to 1985, Thomas Ruff studied photography under Bernd and Hilla Becher at the Kunstakademie D眉sseldorf and became known for developing series that pursue the experimental approach to the medium and persistently questioning preconceived notions of photography. With Ruff鈥檚 ongoing pursuit of the visual expression of the beauty of mathematics, he has previously used mathematical formulas in his work. In this series, he focuses on "fractals," a geometrical pattern that when a section of the pattern is enlarged, the same structure can be seen again and again. With a new software, he artificially generated the geometric structure, which appears in nature as the structure of a snowflake, into a three-dimensional digital image in virtual space. Departing from his previous works, he had the finished motif printed on an industrial carpet to create works that had a spatial depth and a soft surface. As the visual aspects of d.o.pe. echo the 1960s and 70s psychedelic art, the title of the series is based on the English title of Aldous Huxley's autobiographical essay 鈥淭he Doors of Perception鈥 (1954). Ruff鈥檚 images additionally recall the bright colors and exuberant fantasy worlds of the Northern Renaissance style of artists such as Hieronymus Bosch and Matthias Gr眉newald, alluding to the limitlessness of artistic imagination.

Based in New York, Haim Steinbach is known for his installations, arranging his collected objects to daily necessities on a shelf which he presents as "framing devices," triangular column-shaped shelves based on three angles鈥90, 50, and 40 degrees of a triangle, fabricated in various colors. The room-filling installation often includes wall texts appropriated from manga zine ads and other sources, setting forth new contexts for a wide range of objects. Gallery Koyanagi will exhibit a wooden wall box that features a small-scale copy of Degas鈥 鈥淪panish dancer.鈥 This museum souvenir statuette made of faux bronze rest atop an antique stool. Steinbach describes the work as follows. 鈥淧laced on glass shelves, a few inches from the bottom of each box, the arrangements appear to defy gravity, with their shadows adding further dimension.鈥

Hiroshi Sugimoto鈥檚 鈥極pticks鈥 series originates in his idea to recreate Sir Isaac Newton鈥檚 prism experiments, and it took Sugimoto 15 years of investigation and verification to complete. In 1704 Newton notified the world, who believed that the sunlight was white, that in fact it was made up of multiple colors like red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet, all with different refractive indices, by his publication OPTICKS. And today, Sugimoto employed and improved the observational apparatus that Newton has invented, which disperses the sunlight into the array of colors through a prism, and succeeded in capturing the exact colors, by recording it on the extinct Polaroid film. He then produced large-scale chromogenic prints that are sufficiently expansive for viewers to "merge into the color," by using those Polaroid films to recreate the infinite tones and gradations that appear in the gap between colors.

Akiko Hashimoto, who held a solo exhibition at Gallery Koyanagi in 2021, has been presenting installations structured around her elaborate pencil drawings. She describes her activity as "making scenery" in which she incorporates the whole changing phase at the site鈥攖he light pouring into the exhibition space, the shadows, the time passing, and the movement of people, as an artwork. In the work presented in this exhibition, she took a portion of the work from last year's duo exhibition "Other Rooms" and placed it inside a handcrafted wooden shelf. In the shelf, divided by glazing, lines arise like shadows from the glass spoon and the cup, and the pencil drawing offers a glimpse into a place "far away".



Gallery Koyanagi is pleased to present the exhibition 鈥淕allery selection鈥 from Wednesday, July 5 to Saturday, August 26, 2023. This exhibition will feature Thomas Ruff's latest series "d.o.pe.," in which he printed the composed 鈥榝ractal鈥 patterns onto the industrial carpet, and Haim Steinbach鈥檚 鈥淪panish dancer鈥 with a Degas statuette incorporated in a wooden wall box. Also on view is "OPTICKS" by Hiroshi Sugimoto, the artist鈥檚 first color photo series that captured the sunlight dispersed into the array of colors through a prism, and 鈥淪easide鈥 by Akiko Hashimoto reinstalled her drawing into the furniture.

From 1977 to 1985, Thomas Ruff studied photography under Bernd and Hilla Becher at the Kunstakademie D眉sseldorf and became known for developing series that pursue the experimental approach to the medium and persistently questioning preconceived notions of photography. With Ruff鈥檚 ongoing pursuit of the visual expression of the beauty of mathematics, he has previously used mathematical formulas in his work. In this series, he focuses on "fractals," a geometrical pattern that when a section of the pattern is enlarged, the same structure can be seen again and again. With a new software, he artificially generated the geometric structure, which appears in nature as the structure of a snowflake, into a three-dimensional digital image in virtual space. Departing from his previous works, he had the finished motif printed on an industrial carpet to create works that had a spatial depth and a soft surface. As the visual aspects of d.o.pe. echo the 1960s and 70s psychedelic art, the title of the series is based on the English title of Aldous Huxley's autobiographical essay 鈥淭he Doors of Perception鈥 (1954). Ruff鈥檚 images additionally recall the bright colors and exuberant fantasy worlds of the Northern Renaissance style of artists such as Hieronymus Bosch and Matthias Gr眉newald, alluding to the limitlessness of artistic imagination.

Based in New York, Haim Steinbach is known for his installations, arranging his collected objects to daily necessities on a shelf which he presents as "framing devices," triangular column-shaped shelves based on three angles鈥90, 50, and 40 degrees of a triangle, fabricated in various colors. The room-filling installation often includes wall texts appropriated from manga zine ads and other sources, setting forth new contexts for a wide range of objects. Gallery Koyanagi will exhibit a wooden wall box that features a small-scale copy of Degas鈥 鈥淪panish dancer.鈥 This museum souvenir statuette made of faux bronze rest atop an antique stool. Steinbach describes the work as follows. 鈥淧laced on glass shelves, a few inches from the bottom of each box, the arrangements appear to defy gravity, with their shadows adding further dimension.鈥

Hiroshi Sugimoto鈥檚 鈥極pticks鈥 series originates in his idea to recreate Sir Isaac Newton鈥檚 prism experiments, and it took Sugimoto 15 years of investigation and verification to complete. In 1704 Newton notified the world, who believed that the sunlight was white, that in fact it was made up of multiple colors like red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet, all with different refractive indices, by his publication OPTICKS. And today, Sugimoto employed and improved the observational apparatus that Newton has invented, which disperses the sunlight into the array of colors through a prism, and succeeded in capturing the exact colors, by recording it on the extinct Polaroid film. He then produced large-scale chromogenic prints that are sufficiently expansive for viewers to "merge into the color," by using those Polaroid films to recreate the infinite tones and gradations that appear in the gap between colors.

Akiko Hashimoto, who held a solo exhibition at Gallery Koyanagi in 2021, has been presenting installations structured around her elaborate pencil drawings. She describes her activity as "making scenery" in which she incorporates the whole changing phase at the site鈥攖he light pouring into the exhibition space, the shadows, the time passing, and the movement of people, as an artwork. In the work presented in this exhibition, she took a portion of the work from last year's duo exhibition "Other Rooms" and placed it inside a handcrafted wooden shelf. In the shelf, divided by glazing, lines arise like shadows from the glass spoon and the cup, and the pencil drawing offers a glimpse into a place "far away".



Contact details

1-7-5 Ginza 8F, Koyanagi Building Chuo-ku - Tokyo, Japan 104-0061
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