Satoru Kurata "Night Waiting for Morning" 2024 oil on canvas 149.0 x 199.0 cm ©Satoru Kurata

Satoru Kurata "Night Waiting for Morning"

Tomio Koyama Gallery Kyobashi
Until Feb 1

Artists

Satoru Kurata
During his first solo exhibition at our gallery, Kurata said that his practice could be read in terms of “worthlessness and beauty.” He has been producing work from a personal standpoint, in response to the question of whether life is devoid of meaning and worthless, forms of beauty that exist in spite of this, and the movements of our hearts and minds.

In his childhood, Kurata had an extreme fear of death and the nocturnal act of sleeping that is similar to death. To alleviate this, he came to believe that life and death are equally worthless.The accompanying feelings of lethargy, apathy, and worthlessness gradually came to torment him. The ambiguity and sensation of the emptiness of human existence that Kurata felt in his father’s car when he was in his 20s, seen in such works as Hollow Drive (2018-2019), which emerged from the feeling of being carried along as if he had become invisible, to a point where there was little to differentiate himself from the luggage, developed into a unique form of painterly expression.

The objects depicted in the new works on display at this exhibition have changed dramatically. Previously, Kurata’s motifs were mostly imagined from memory: dusk, the sea, night, cars, eggs, dogs, sleeping, and so on. Since moving to the suburbs where there are many elderly people several years ago, however, Kurata began to paint people, plants, nature, animals, and daytime scenes that he saw daily in his studio, home, and the surrounding areas as concrete subjects for his paintings.

The gap between Kurata’s current life in the countryside and the city and the world, the physical and mental decline he experienced in his thirties, and the death of his elderly neighbors may have imbued his previously nihilistic existence with a greater sense of reality through comparisons with others, as well as changes to his own life.

Kurata’s new work Night Waiting for Morning is a self-portrait of himself lying down in his studio, with succulent plants in the background that he actually grows. The paintings within this painting are images of his previous works.

Another new work, In a Tree of the Night, is a painting of a thicket of trees in Kurata’s neighborhood. According to him, the initial intention was to depict two people walking in a wooded area in bright daylight. As he worked on it, however, it changed to a wooded area at night, and three people appeared. While Kurata himself initially proceeds with his work based on fleeting images and words, he only realizes why he is painting them as he goes along, or after they are completed. His works are devices for self-awareness that encompass trajectories of thought and time.

These works feel turbulent yet calm. Everything seems to be coincidental, and viewers feel as if something in them is related to them. Their humor, meanwhile, is somehow redeeming.

Schedule

Now in session

Dec 20 (Fri) 2024-Feb 1 (Sat) 2025 40 days left

Opening Hours Information

Hours
11:00-19:00
Closed
Sunday, Monday, Holidays
Closed from December 29 to January 7.

Opening Reception Dec 20 (Fri) 2024 17:00 - 19:00

FeeFree
Websitehttps://tomiokoyamagallery.com/en/exhibitions/kurata2024/
VenueTomio Koyama Gallery Kyobashi
https://tomiokoyamagallery.com/en/
Location3F Toda Building, 1-7-1 Kyobashi, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 104-8388
Access3 minute walk from exit 6 at Kyobashi Station on the Ginza line, 5 minute walk from exit B1 at Nihombashi Station on the Ginza and Tozai lines, 5 minute walk from exit A7 at Takaracho Station on the Toei Asakusa line, 7 minute walk from the Yaesu Central exit of JR Tokyo Station.
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