Exhibition
Autobiographical Animals by AKI INOMATA
10 Mar 2023 – 31 May 2023
Regular hours
- Monday
- 09:30 – 17:00
- Tuesday
- 09:30 – 17:00
- Wednesday
- 09:30 – 17:00
- Thursday
- 09:30 – 17:00
- Friday
- 09:30 – 17:00
- Saturday
- Closed
- Sunday
- Closed
Special hours
- 26-Apr-2023
- 09:30 – 20:00
Free admission
Address
- 13/14 Cornwall Terrace
- London
- NW1 4QP
- United Kingdom
Travel Information
- Buses: 2, 13, 18, 27, 30, 74, 82, 113, 139, 189 and 274
- Tube: Baker St.
The Daiwa Anglo-Japanese Foundation is pleased to present AKI INOMATA’s first UK solo exhibition Autobiographical Animals.
About
The Daiwa Anglo-Japanese Foundation is pleased to present AKI INOMATA’s first UK solo exhibition Autobiographical Animals. The show will centre around one of INOMATA’s most recent projects, Memory of Currency (2018-2021) and introduce her practice, which for many years has involved collaboration with non-human creatures such as hermit crabs, bagworms, octopuses and ammonites. Her works encompass a wide range of media, from sculptures and prints to video works, as she always attempts to find the best method to present the process of co-working with specific animals.
INOMATA rejects the division between humans and other species, and attempts to overcome it by creating unexpected re-encounters with otherness. Born and reared in urban environments where human beings are isolated from other animals, she engages in a conscious self-critique of humans as an authority assuming the power to control the world we live in, ignoring and excluding uncontrollable others.
Memory of Currency is a project in which INOMATA collaborated with pearl oysters to create currency ‘fossils’. INOMATA implanted artificial nuclei into the tissues of the pearl oysters, with the shape of each nucleus modelled on the portrait of a figure depicted on one of today’s major currencies, such as Queen Elizabeth II, George Washington and Yukichi Fukuzawa. The figures symbolise the monetary economy and also reference historical narratives – civilisation, colonisation, slavery, and the removal of indigenous people, among others. Accompanying the pearl portraits produced by the oysters, the video installation shows footage of the pearl oyster shells sinking into the ocean, stimulating the imagination to think beyond the present time. By creating a meeting between oysters and the manmade concept of capitalism, INOMATA questions if this economic system and this way of narrating history are the only ways to situate ourselves in this world.
As we struggle amid economic recession and the alarming situation of the climate crisis, Autobiographical Animals reminds us of our entangled existence in this world and encourages us to be more imaginative and to relearn our relationships with other species.
<Text by Haruna Takeda>
The exhibition has been possible through the generous support of the Great Britain Sasakwa Foundation and MAHO KUBOTA GALLERY.
10 March – 31 May 2023
Monday–Friday 9:30am–5pm
Admission free
PRIVATE VIEW & ARTIST TALK
Thursday 9 March 6pm-8pm
Late openings (until 8pm):
Wednesday 26 April
(more dates to come…)