Tomoko Kashiki

Tomoko Kashiki (樫木知子, Kashiki Tomoko, born 1982) is a Japanese artist based in Kyoto, Japan.[1] She is known for her paintings, which often portray dreamlike scenes of lone female figures.[2][3]

Tomoko Kashiki
Born
Tomoko Kashiki

1982
Kyoto, Japan
NationalityJapanese
EducationKyoto City University of Arts
OccupationArtist
Known forPainting

Early life and education

Kashiki was born in Kyoto City, Japan.[4]

In 2006, she earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in oil painting and in 2008, a Master of Fine Arts degree in painting, both from Kyoto City University of Arts. In 2011, she earned a PhD in painting from Kyoto City University of Arts.[1]

Career

Despite her previous training in Nihonga,[5] Kashiki's paintings are often compared to Surrealist works because of the "melted" quality of her subject matter and individualized technique.[6]

Kashiki reinforces themes that are found elsewhere in contemporary Japanese art such as providing immersive visual escapes from society's uneasiness left from recent natural disasters like the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.[2]

In 2011, she was featured in the "BYE BYE KITTY!!! Between Heaven and Hell in Contemporary Japanese Art" exhibition curated by David Elliott at the Japan Society in New York City, along with fifteen other contemporary Japanese artists.[7]

Subject matter

The intricate details of Kashiki's work is said to be influenced by Buddhist art from the Heian period.[8]

Kashiki primarily paints female figures[9] and is said to also draw inspiration from Bijin-ga style of depicting beautiful women, a central theme from the ukiyo-e genre of Japanese art.[8] Her concern with specific details of the body, such as wrinkled skin, are reflected in a series of drawings from 2014.[6]

The settings in which these figures are placed are often "otherworldly backgrounds",[5] which still appear to be loosely based on the city of Kyoto, Tomoko Kashiki's hometown.[2] Interior spaces where she often situates her women are identifiable. The hallways, columns, windows, even electrical sockets provide a definitive sense of ground[8] yet seemingly empty, varied, and flattened perspectives[5] create "an imaginary and ethereal world with no specific temporal or geographic location".[2]

Style

Kashiki carefully selects all of the elements of a painting based on a clear, "private philosophy of beauty".[10] "...gesture, facial expression, pose, specific objects, background, location, situation, spacial [sic] composition, surface texture, line thickness, nexus of layers, degree of blurring" all become relevant considerations to her vision.[10]

Fluid, organic and sensual elements like the effects of water are reoccurring themes in Kashiki's works,[5] which she explains to be informed by her "fresh feeling of being alive".[10] Dream, desire[5] and yearning[2] remain to be central motifs, which begin "bleeding into the surreal".[8] Bodies and shadowy figures have unreal, distorted physiques – featuring excessively long, flowing limbs – a common characteristic to find in Surrealist art.[2] Her settings are also seen as recognizably Surrealist in their vast, empty yet familiar nature.[2]

Technique

Kashiki uses various painting mediums including acrylic, pastel, color pencil, and others.[5] In some recent works, she has painted directly onto wooden panel.[9] Since her graduate training, Kashiki began following a complex, ritualized process of her own.[2] First sketched in pencil, her works are painted in acrylic, layer by layer onto a linen cloth mounted on large Chamfered wooden boards.[9] Compositions are structured with overlapping, receding facets as she paints, sands and carves the surface of the panel, then repaints and pounces,[2] layer over layer.[8] This multi-step process has been seen as a physical articulation of Kashiki's own fleeting impressions – the "flickering", fleeting landscapes of emotions and memories in her mind.[8] In this way, Kashiki's paintings have been considered "a manifestation of [her] inner landscape".[11]

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions
  • 2006: Galerie 16, Kyoto, Japan – "Time of Sprouting"
  • 2007: Galerie 16, Kyoto, Japan
  • 2008: MEM, Osaka, Japan
  • 2009: Ota Fine Arts, Tokyo, Japan
  • 2011: Ota Fine Arts, Tokyo, Japan
  • 2014: Ota Fine Arts, Singapore
  • 2015: Galerie Nathalie Obadia, Paris, France
  • 2016: 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa, Ishikawa, Japan – "Tomoko Kashiki ~Daydream~"
  • 2016: Ota Fine Arts, Tokyo, Japan
Group exhibitions
  • 2006: Kyoto City University of Arts, Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art, Kyoto – Graduate Degree Show
  • 2007: Gallery Natsuka, Tokyo, Japan – Image of Graphic Void
  • 2007: Kyoto City University of Arts, Kyoto, Japan – Works Exhibition
  • 2007: Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art, Kyoto, Japan
  • 2007: Galerie 16, Kyoto, Japan
  • 2007: The Museum of Kyoto, Kyoto – Selected Artists in Kyoto – 2007 New Wave
  • 2007: Hyogo Prefectural Museum of Art Haradanomori Gallery, Kobe, Japan – Acrylic Art Awards
  • 2008: Ota Fine Arts, Tokyo, Japan – When you switch off your mobile, painting starts to talk eloquently
  • 2008: Daiwa Press Viewing Room, Hiroshima, Japan – Zegahi-no Kaiga (Painting, Right or Wrong)
  • 2008: MEM, Osaka – Love of Painting
  • 2008: Kyoto City University of Arts, Kyoto, Japan – Works Exhibition
  • 2008: Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art, Kyoto, Japan
  • 2009: Takahashi Collection, Hibiya, Japan – Neoneo Part2 [girls]
  • 2009: The Ueno Royal Museum, Taito, Japan – VOCA 2009: The Vision of Contemporary Art
  • 2009: Kyoto City University of Arts, Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art, Kyoto, Japan – Works Exhibition INTERIM SHOW
  • 2010: Kyoto City University of Arts Art Gallery, Kyoto, Japan – Exhibition of the Works of Doctoral Students at KCUA
  • 2010: The Niigata Bandaijima Art Museum, Niigata, Japan – Narrative Paintings
  • 2010: Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre, Hong Kong – ART HK10 Hong Kong International Art Fair
  • 2010: Mori Arts Center Gallery, Tokyo, Japan – G-tokyo 2010
  • 2011: Japan Society, New York City – Bye Bye Kitty!!! Between Heaven and Hell in Contemporary Japanese Art
  • 2011: Nihonbashi Takashimaya, Tokyo, Japan – ZIPANGU
  • 2011: NYK Waterfront Warehouse, BankART Studio NYK, Yokohama, Japan – Yokohama Triennale 2011
  • 2015: Queensland Gallery of Modern Art (QAGOMA), Queensland, Australia – We Can Make Another Future: Japanese Art After 1989
  • 2016: Ota Fine Arts, Tokyo, Japan – primal lines
  • 2016: Ota Fine Arts, New York City – The Armory Show
  • 2016: Galerie Nathalie Obadia, Hong Kong – Art Basel
  • 2016: Ota Fine Arts, Shanghai, China – ART021 Shanghai Contemporary Art Fair
Public collections
  • Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane, Australia
  • The Dai-ichi Life Insurance Company, Limited
  • Museum of Old and New Art, Tasmania, Australia
  • Toyota Art Collection

Awards

  • 2006: Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art, Kyoto City University of Arts – Alumni Association prize for Graduate Degree Show
  • 2007: Bank of Kyoto – Bank of Kyoto Artist Support Program
  • 2007: Japanese Acrylic Art Association – Acrylic Art Award
  • 2009: VOCA – Encouragement Prize
  • 2011: Kyoto City University of Arts – Takeshi Umehara Prize
  • 2012: City of Kyoto, Kyoto City Culture and Citizens Affairs Bureau – The Best Young Artist Award

References

  1. "Tomoko Kashiki Biography". Japigozzi Collection. 2010.
  2. "Current Shows Tomoko Kashiki April 1 – May 15, 2015 Cloître St Merri II, Paris". Galerie Nathalie Obadia. 2015.
  3. Chayka, Kyle (March 17, 2011). "Japan Society's Goodbye to Hello Kitty". Hyperallergic.
  4. "Tomoko Kashiki". Ota Fine Arts. 2016.
  5. "Contemporary Asian Art Lot 914 – Tomoko Kashiki". Sotheby's. Hong Kong. October 6, 2013.
  6. Leese, Samantha (2014). "Tomoko Kashiki at Ota Fine Arts – artforum.com / critics' picks". Artforum.
  7. "Bye Bye Kitty!!! Between Heaven and Hell in Contemporary Japanese Art". Japan Society. 2011.
  8. "Tomoko Kashiki". artnet. 2014.
  9. Elliott, David (2014). Tomoko Kashiki and the Floating World. Ota Fine Arts.
  10. "Artist Tomoko Kashiki on how she paints". The Guardian. 2009.
  11. Ozawa, Tsuyoshi (2009). Exhibition Reviews 04: Kashiki Tomoko. ARTiT. p. 102.

Further reading

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