Exhibition/event has ended.
[Image: Tomona Matsukawa "My Flower Will Never Die" 2021]

Tomona Matsukawa "My Flower Will Never Die"

Yuka Tsuruno Gallery
Finished

Artists

Tomona Matsukawa
Yuka Tsuruno Gallery is pleased to present Tomona Matsukawa’s solo exhibition “My flower will never die” from January 29th to February 19th, 2022. In her first solo exhibition in two years, she presents new works reconsidering the standpoint of the mother. By painting the relationship between parent and child while giving thought to the perspective of the child, she pursues a more expansive rapport that is not bound by this relationship.
Matsukawa conducts interviews with women of similar age or who are living in similar circumstances, and selects meaningful events or phrases from these conversations as the painting’s image or its title. Her works articulate the nature of human interactions and interior complexities that manifest in traces of daily life or gestures, as well as the conflict or desires that inhabit them. Scenes and objects from everyday life are painted up close in hyperrealistic fashion, and the theatrical light allows these sentiments to linger in silence while retaining their striking impression. Her subjects change as she grows older – the young women who appeared in her early works gradually become mothers, acutely observing the aging of the body, accepting the intricate sentiments that accompany the passage of time such as anxieties, pain, and weakness, and her works take on an affirming tone. In particular, in the series “Love Yourself” (2018-), her works are imbued with a strong urge for women who live as parents to not be stifled by the pressures and social prejudices, and to love themselves.
Yet several years since she started this series, in dealing with an adolescent child, she starts to wonder whether her own child is experiencing the same sort of solitude and anxiety that she harbored towards her own mother. In recent conversations with other women, she inquires about memories with their own mothers. Instead of a mere one way outlook on the conflicts and complications of a mother, she contemplates an opportunity for healing in this relationship by considering the regard a child holds for their mother.
Based on such interviews, her new work examines the continuing relationship of the mother-child, as well as a “chain reaction” that persists like a hex between parent and child, and re-considers the position or existence of the mother from this point of view. This chain reaction holds the possibility of reproduction as the social responsibility or pressures of the mother-child become rooted in various forms such as concealed loneliness or absence of affection, child abuse problems, children who “become possessions” from being bound to overbearing love or expectations. Taking into account this kind of chain reaction that is in no way easily ruptured, to consider the viewpoint of the child is, for Matsukawa, to “slay (overcome) the mother as a daughter,” while being in the position of a mother, as well as a catalyst for creating relations as an individual as well as a process for freeing oneself.

Schedule

Jan 29 (Sat) 2022-Feb 19 (Sat) 2022 

Opening Hours Information

Hours
11:00-18:00
Closed
Monday, Sunday, Holidays
Notice
Exhibition Hours: 11:00-18:00.
FeeFree
Websitehttps://yukatsuruno.com/en/exhibitions/pr093_my-flower-will-never-die
VenueYuka Tsuruno Gallery
http://yukatsuruno.com/
Location3F Terrada Art Complex, 1-33-10 Higashi Shinagawa, Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo 140-0002
Access9 minute walk from exit B at Tennozu Isle Station on the Rinkai line, 10 minute walk from the South exit of Tennozu Isle Station on the Tokyo Monorail line, 9 minute walk from the North exit of Shimbamba Station on the Keikyu line.
Phone03-5781-2525
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