“There’s a part of me that likes testing the audience.”
Yoshitomo Nara
Japan’s 3.11 the Tsunamit, Earthquake and the
resultant Fukushima nuclear power plant accident killed over 20,000
people and caused over 300,000 to be evacuated. It was the country’s biggest natural
disaster in living memory and its effects have been a deeply traumatic experience
for the Japanese people.
Among whom, the Japanese Neo-pop artist Yoshitomo Nara, can be
counted. He was unable to work for six months following the disaster. As he
told the Asymptote
Journal “I became unable to draw. I guess everyone in Japan went through
the same kind of emotional experience: I was so depressed that I couldn't help
feeling that what I'd been doing was totally meaningless and useless. No one
needs art in an extreme situation, after all. People don't think of art unless
they are living with a certain mental and physical richness.”
Known for his simply rendered, manga influenced works of coy
and sometimes creepy children, Nara grew up as a latch key child in the
northern Japanese town of Hirosaki. Surrounded by comics, picture books and album
covers, listening to the American Armed Service’s radio, his was a solitary
childhood. About which he has said “I was lonely, and music and animals were a
comfort. I could communicate better with animals, without words, than
communicating verbally with humans.”
Nara found his way back into making art after 3.11 through
sculpture. As he told the Japan
Times “I couldn’t make pictures on a blank
canvas, but I found I could confront a mass of clay. I wouldn’t think about it
with my mind. I would just attack it, like in sumo, with my body.”
It took Nara a further five
months before he could start painting again and when he did his works became
more nuanced and complex. Flat backgrounds became graduated, simple eyes became
complex.
In part as a response to
3.11, but Nara also says the changes are a result of the aging process. “My
physical power and ability have decayed, of course, but I've obtained new,
far-sighted eyes in exchange. Aging does my work good in this sense. I see a
big picture, instead of the details I used to focus on with my younger eyes. I
enjoy the bird's-eye view of being an older man. And I don't need reading
glasses yet!”
His current exhibition Life
is Only One is current on show at The Hong Kong
Jockey Club until 26th of July. A second exhibition of his work Stars will open on the 13th of March at
Kong Kong’s Pace
Gallery and run through until the 25th of April.
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