Kohei NAWA: TRANS

5 September - 2 December 2012 Cheonan
Overview

Period | 5 September – 2 December, 2012
Venue | Arario Gallery Cheonan, Seoul cheongdam
Works | 40 pieces including installation, painting, sculpture
Opening Reception | 6pm, Wednesday, 5 September, 2012

 

A solo exhibition by the Japanese artist Kohei Nawa (b. 1975), the first young artist to hold a solo exhibition at Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo in 2011, is opening jointly at Arario Gallery Seoul Cheongdam and Arario Gallery Cheonan. Kohei Nawa-TRANS, the artist’s first large-scale exhibition in Korea, presents over 40 of his representative works from the Pixel series and his recent Trans series.

Press release

A solo exhibition by the Japanese artist Kohei Nawa (b. 1975), the first young artist to hold a solo exhibition at Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo in 2011, is opening jointly at Arario Gallery Seoul Cheongdam and Arario Gallery Cheonan. Kohei Nawa-TRANS, the artist’s first large-scale exhibition in Korea, presents over 40 of his representative works from the Pixel series and his recent Trans series.

Kohei Nawa is acclaimed for his PixCell series, which is a word that integrates ‘pixel’, which demonstrates digital image resolution, and the biological ‘cell’. While the subject in each work connotes its own attributes such as weight, smell and color, its essence is lost or distorted through the production process in which glass, crystal and urethane coats covers its surface. PixCell-Deer, the representative work of the PixCell series, is the most celebrated work from the BEADS series that cover taxidermied animals with clear crystal beads. The composite of taxidermied animal and crystal beads is like a completely new organism that entirely deconstructs the initial color, texture and form of the original taxidermied animal and creates a new experience. While the beads in different sizes seem to interfere with the precise reading of the subject, they gain a new function as lens, maximizing color and form, and seducing the viewer. This reminds the viewer that the world which the human senses perceive as the truth is actually ambiguous and uncertain. Through an extensive medium of expression, Kohei Nawa sheds light on the human desire to embrace, cherish and possess the uncertainty.

A part of PixCell Series, PRISM is a sculptural embodiment of motifs collected through the internet. Prism sheets enwraps cell holding an object, and various images appear and disappear according to the actual perspective of the viewer. Through this process, the subject which should remain in the box (cell) loses its sense of realness, lingers as a virtual image, and is reduced of its meaning and symbolic aspect as its perception and its sense of distance are unified. The viewer starts to feel numbness in sense of touch, and prompts the viewer to reflect on the implications this has for other things that we believe we can see, touch, or feel.


Exhibited for the first time through this solo exhibition, Nawa’s recent work TRANS has been produced through cutting-edge sculptural technique using computer and scanner. This process involves a 3D scanning of a person or an object, then applying computer graphics to create work using the scanned data. Applying a computer technique called ‘texture mapping’, Nawa would magnify or diminish the 3D data, or repeat the process of smoothing out the surface. In reference to his TRANS series, Nawa expressed that “the completed form of the model with fluid three-dimensional surface is like a form that is parallel with this world, or a form which any subject or being can have.” In progress since 2012, this new series of work will be exhibited in the form of 9 sculptures juxtaposed in a row in Arario Gallery Seoul Cheongdam.

The large-scale sculpture Manifold signifies many different forms, or pipe structures. An integration of various cells of information, matters and energy, each cell pulls on each other, configuring in space as a sculptural work. Each entity shows a process of evolution, transforming its form for a smooth surface. The sculpture swelling in a threatening way portrays systems in society and nature gradually collapsing due to problems related to information and energy. Measuring 13m in height and 15m in width, Manifold is currently under production in Japan, and will be installed in the outdoor sculpture park in Arario Gallery Cheonan. Manifold is an unparalleled super-scale public art project, with sporadically swelling geometrical shapes of circular forms that overwhelm and awaken the dormant anxiety in the viewer’s subconsciousness. Gradually, however, the work leads the viewer through the experience of overcoming his fears and arriving at a sublime state.

The coherent idea which Nawa tries to express through a series of works using completely different types of various materials, is dangers of environmental system inherent in the massive information society, and the feeling of fear, emptiness and anxiety lurking in human subconsciousness. These ideas manifest into works with atypical and irregular forms suggesting an organic entity of cells, through the integration of biological research and high technology. By creating virtual entities that reveal the structure of contemporary social systems, Nawa’s work sheds light on the issues in contemporary social structure and system.

Artist Biography
Kohei Nawa received his BFA, MFA, and Ph.d. in Fine Arts from the Kyoto City University of Art. He is currently the Assistant Professor in Department of Fine Art at Kyoto University, and the director of the platform SANDWISH, a production house for art, design and architecture. Having launched his artistic career in 1999, Nawa has participated in various group exhibitions including a show at SCAI The Bathhouse in 2004, Galerie Kashya Hildebrand in Switzerland in 2008, The Ueno Royal Museum in 2009, and Saatchi Gallery in London in 2010. His art has been collected by prestigious art galleries in museums around the world, including Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo, Mori Art Museum, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Nawa had a solo exhibition in 2009 with funding from Hermés Foundation, and recently finished a successful large-scale solo exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo. Nawa was named in the list of “50 Next Most Collectible Artists” by the American monthly art magazine Art + Auction in the June issue, 2012.

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