Event
Private View: La Mer by Yuken Teruya
6 Oct 2022
Regular hours
- Thu, 06 Oct
- 18:00 – 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 showcase Yuken Teruya’s first UK show, marking the 50th year of Okinawa’s reversion to Japan after the American occupation.
About
Invisible power has always been the dominant force in our society. Our values, beliefs, and understanding are steered by the social and political status quo – structures which serve to propagate hegemony. I want to excavate the submerged norms that haunt us and expose other perspectives which co-exist. My aim is to surprise people, to shake up preconceptions, and to encourage people to face the future.
Yuken Teruya, 2022
Teruya is fascinated by human perceptions of the ever-changing moment. For him, the modest practice of drawing is a mighty tool not only to observe hierarchies, but to rebalance them. Historically, painting was primarily a medium in the service of the powerful: oil paintings intended to assert authority through the generations. By contrast, Teruya’s work utilises temporary, fragile materials: his cut-out pieces can be described as expanded drawings, but also as delicate sculptures. Perhaps their vulnerability is not feeble, but a powerful statement of immediacy, adaptability and reconstruction.
The sea is a constant presence in the Okinawan landscape and a recurring theme in Teruya’s work. The exhibition La Mer encapsulates Teruya’s perspective: historic and present references to the Okinawan condition, ecological systems within material cultures, and power relationships between countries. Embedded structural power, institutional hierarchy under the colonial lens and the monopoly of knowledge become normalised in everyday life. Teruya’s practice recognises that this process of occupation and assimilation can also be a diversifying influence that suggests a new, open and heterogeneous notion of Japan: antagonistic, but with potential for cross-pollination of cultures and understandings.
Some of the selected works are dialogues with open questions, while others rethink or reframe hidden structures. Instead of aggravating the prevailing power, Teruya injects some humour, bringing in the wider context, often referring to Okinawan tradition. His work has the approachability of a gently told story, almost like a children’s book; yet behind this amiable delivery, the artist’s commentary on political truths is unflinching. As manifested in this exhibition, Teruya’s visual language reflects on issues sometimes overlooked amidst the tranquil vistas of Okinawa.