 6/13 (Sat.)
- 7/25 (Sat.), 2009
Opening Salon: 6/13 Sat. 6pm-9pm
Takesue,
who now works in Tokyo, began to work on digital art after
encountering Macintosh computers through the graphic design
job he took on after graduating from university.
Takesue's
works are all digitally produced but the surfaces of the
images depicting motifs such as landscapes are covered in
brushstrokes reminiscent of conventional oil paintings. The
visual density of the patterns is however, higher than anything
painted by hand and exemplifies Takesue's challenge at expanding
the potential of digital expression.
"I
seek a 'presence' that can only be achieved through digital
works; that is the motivation for my creation. A 'presence'
that comes to the fore through repeatedly drawing over and
modifying the existing image. It is about giving a material
feeling to the immaterial digital." - Koichiro Takesue
Digital
images do not change physically regardless of how much they
may be worked on. However, Takesue's digital brushstroke
patterns, clearly the result of a monumental amount of work,
leave a mysterious impression on the viewer especially because
of the contrast with the flat surface on which they are printed.
The motifs are also somehow portentous while seemingly lacking
any context, inducing an uncanny anxiety.
Takesue's
works seek to gain a presence through the obsessive work
on an immaterial surface depicting a story-less scene. It
may be rather too sentimental to see in it our disorientated
contemporary society, but to view these dense images and
to let our minds drift is to renew our awareness of our own
fluctuating existence that constantly seeks to retain its
shape. |