Exhibition

Nobuyoshi Araki. I , Photography

12 Jul 2018 – 31 Aug 2018

Regular hours

Thursday
10:00 – 18:00
Friday
10:00 – 18:00
Saturday
10:00 – 18:00
Tuesday
10:00 – 18:00
Wednesday
10:00 – 18:00

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I , Photography presents four distinct bodies of work by Japanese photographer Nobuyoshi Araki. The exhibition takes its title from a phrase in the opening manifesto of Sentimental Journey, a document of the intimate and mundane moments of his honeymoon.

About

In the spirit of that text, the four series of photographs on display are united by the artist's use of the camera as a tool for reflecting on the complexities of life.

The 22 photographs from Araki’s Lovers Allure series exemplify his best-known subject, eroticism and the female form. His subjects pose nude in black and white in bedrooms and bathrooms, on tatami mats and in other intimate, domestic spaces. The surfaces of these prints have been painted with eye-popping ribbons of color, a reference to the visceral nature of sexual desire. The series Erotos—derived from Thanatos, the ancient Greek personification of death and Eros the god of love—further injects the artist into his portrayal of sex and eroticism. Black and white close-up depictions of body parts, often caught in sexual acts, are juxtaposed with still life photographs of fruits and objects that have been rendered in high contrast with every detail of their surfaces unflinchingly captured.

If sex marks a central preoccupation for the artist and one side of the life-cycle, death is the other. For Araki, photography is a diary: a record of what happens from day to day and a space where his “self” can be reflected in his subjects. Hung in the main gallery, Araki’s newest series, Flower Cemetery serves as the focal point of this exhibition. Still life photographs of flower arrangements are haunted by disused, children’s dolls, toys and plastic figures. Focusing his lens on cut flowers, a source of intense but temporary beauty, the artist reflects on mortality. Populated by ungainly plastic figures in scenes that are both humorous and disquieting, these images can be read as a method of deflected self-portraiture.

Whereas Erotos and Flower Cemetery balance life with death, his photos of the sky offer a moment of reflection and escape. Though seemingly based in landscape, Araki began taking the photos from Northern Sky following the death of his wife.

Flowers, cities, the sky, people and still lifes continue to comprise the artist’s central subjects, none given greater weight than the rest. Taken together, these images illustrate the impulse to communicate the full scope of his life’s experience. Obscuring the line between the morbid and the beautiful, Araki celebrates the truth that death is inseparable from life.

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Nobuyoshi Araki

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