journal
Photography: Courtesy of the artist
08 / 10 / 2021
Riding for a Fall is Kazuhito Kawai first solo exhibition with Sokyo Lisbon.
Using a distinctive approach to ceramic, Kawai’s sculptures emerge like castles or vessels in which the extreme glaze overflows with nostalgic expression that holds and traps the artist’s emotions and concepts.
The title of the exhibition is a reference to Tracey Emin’s homonymous work from 1998, a work that Kawai first experienced while studying art in London. In the video Riding for a Fall, Tracey Emin is seen wearing a cowboy hat and riding a horse in circles in a sandy beach. Endlessly and without purpose the set-up renders an all too rehearsed poise. The film imprinted on the young student as an exercise in narcissism. Something now familiar to all when contemplating streams of Instagram, Tik Tok and other social media outlets. For Kazuhito Kawai, his self portrait works are equally staged yet they are meant to hold something in their abstraction: “They hold and trap my emotions and memories”. Their titles are references to his thoughts and as such, each sculpture contains a sense of longing or nostalgia, belonging or alienation by which, the familiarity of the name can trigger a gateway for the viewer through his own personal interpretation or empathy.
In the work Lion King, Kazuhito Kawai refers to the memory of when his sister took his family to see the Shiki Theater Company's Lion King production, with her first salary. Art Tower Mito, brings back his memory of the first museum he bought a ticket to and visited on his own. Elsewhere, Masafumi Sanai and the Seven Stars, the most enclosed of the sculptures on view, evokes his memories of the loneliness felt when living alone for the first time in Tokyo and the discovery and solace of Masafumi Sanai’s photography, which were popular at the time. The high or low brow references run parallel in the artist. It is not so much about their intrinsic meaning but more relatable to what YouTube, music, movies, art, fashion and all kind of subcultures act as a collage in his personal memories.
“Touching the soil triggers and reconstructs the memories and emotions that are evoked. What I have trapped in the vessel bursts into a small explosion.” - Kazuhito Kawai, October 2020
The sculptures play with senses and emotions but avoid sentimentality. For Kazuhito Kawai, clay has served as a release, an encounter with the possibility of a new plastic language and an opportunity to ground him to feelings, moments and thoughts perhaps not noticeable to him at first.
The exhibition can be visited from October 20th to December 4th, 2021.
The title of the exhibition is a reference to Tracey Emin’s homonymous work from 1998, a work that Kawai first experienced while studying art in London. In the video Riding for a Fall, Tracey Emin is seen wearing a cowboy hat and riding a horse in circles in a sandy beach. Endlessly and without purpose the set-up renders an all too rehearsed poise. The film imprinted on the young student as an exercise in narcissism. Something now familiar to all when contemplating streams of Instagram, Tik Tok and other social media outlets. For Kazuhito Kawai, his self portrait works are equally staged yet they are meant to hold something in their abstraction: “They hold and trap my emotions and memories”. Their titles are references to his thoughts and as such, each sculpture contains a sense of longing or nostalgia, belonging or alienation by which, the familiarity of the name can trigger a gateway for the viewer through his own personal interpretation or empathy.
In the work Lion King, Kazuhito Kawai refers to the memory of when his sister took his family to see the Shiki Theater Company's Lion King production, with her first salary. Art Tower Mito, brings back his memory of the first museum he bought a ticket to and visited on his own. Elsewhere, Masafumi Sanai and the Seven Stars, the most enclosed of the sculptures on view, evokes his memories of the loneliness felt when living alone for the first time in Tokyo and the discovery and solace of Masafumi Sanai’s photography, which were popular at the time. The high or low brow references run parallel in the artist. It is not so much about their intrinsic meaning but more relatable to what YouTube, music, movies, art, fashion and all kind of subcultures act as a collage in his personal memories.
“Touching the soil triggers and reconstructs the memories and emotions that are evoked. What I have trapped in the vessel bursts into a small explosion.” - Kazuhito Kawai, October 2020
The sculptures play with senses and emotions but avoid sentimentality. For Kazuhito Kawai, clay has served as a release, an encounter with the possibility of a new plastic language and an opportunity to ground him to feelings, moments and thoughts perhaps not noticeable to him at first.
The exhibition can be visited from October 20th to December 4th, 2021.
For more information, visit Sokyo Lisbon Gallery website.