TWELV is excited to announce Tokyo-based, photographer Jörgen Axelvall’s new exhibition and book release, Go To Become.
SHIOTA CHIHARU EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW
TWELV interviewed performance and installation artist Chiharu Shiota and discussed her personal and professional life, as well as her inspiration and what plans she has for the future. The COVID-19 pandemic halted many happenings, locally and globally. The virus however did not prevent Chiharu Shiota from making art. In fact, Shiota says she is an artist 24 hours of the day, and staying home during quarantine allowed her to focus more on her work. Although she said it is difficult to plan ahead because of the uncertainty of the future, she said that she will participate in a group show in Korea and Italy, and will exhibit a solo show in Vietnam. Shiota, native of Japan but resident of Berlin, is an artist who is quickly growing in world-wide popularity and recognition for her work. Her work typically touches upon both Japanese and German themes, and she said that although she is influenced by both due to her circumstances, she is generally inspired by her life. The subject of Shiota's work is "existence in the absence". Her art expresses what she could not put into words. Shiota also opened up about her battle with cancer and how that influenced her work and allowed her to use her drawings as a diary.
1. Would you say that your art contains influences of Japan and Berlin, or have you transcended the need to represent homeland identity in your creations?
I grew up in Japan, but I am not making Japanese or German Art. I am influenced by Japan and Berlin because of my circumstance. I am inspired by my life.
2. Will we ever see you make a return to painting?
I do not make oil paintings anymore, and I am not a painter. But I still create a lot of drawings. They are like my personal diary.
3. I’ve noticed you’re very hands-on with the creation of your own art installations. Of course, you need the help of others but will there ever be a point where you’re completely hands-off and simply directing the process?
If I create an installation exactly the same as before, maybe you can make a video of how it is made, but it would not help because the next time everything is different. No one can see what is in my brain, and it is impossible to tell what I see.
4. Getting married and finding love in Berlin, a home away from home, did that affect your art?
Yes, this is my life and my experience. It is always connected to my art. I am an artist 24 hours every day.
5. It is obvious that you utilize colors, shapes, and patterns. Can people ever expect sound to be in a Chiharu Shiota artwork, is that something you’ll ever do?
No, I am not planning on working with sound. Some performance videos have sound, but the installations are too powerful. The sight of the installation is already strong, and if there would be sound as well, it would be too much information for visitors to process, too much for the brain.
6. What motivates you to come to work? What inspires your artwork?
When I was traveling, I had time to think in the airplane or on the train. When I have limited time but free time I think about my life and work. When I see the sky from the airplane, my mind wonders.
7. Do you have any regrets with any of your artworks?
I have many. Art is never perfect. That is why I need the next exhibition, to try to make it perfect.
8. Did you intend to stay in Berlin as long as you have or did that just sort of happen?
I wanted to come to Berlin, and then I happened to stay here, I met my husband, made a family. There is never an exact plan.
9. Do you have a specific/certain creative process or paradigm to your work, or does each new creation differ in how you approach it?
Every space is different, and every ceiling and wall is different, but the process is similar. That is why I need to see the space at first, then I can make a plan.
10. Dealing with ovarian cancer and overcoming it, how did that affect the themes in your art?
It influenced my work in many ways. For example, for a long time, I could not draw anymore, I think for almost ten years. But after dealing with cancer, I started drawing again. Before I was thinking about making drawings, but after the cancer diagnoses, I tried to make drawings without a technique, it was more about my feeling, what is inside. My drawings have become my diary.
11. Do you feel there’s anything that you haven’t been able to translate through your work, emotions or ideas too complicated to properly display perhaps?
My work always expresses something I can’t explain myself. If I can’t explain, I make art – maybe my work comes close to explaining these feelings because I can never explain them with language. It is more explained by eyesight not by language.
12. With me being someone that has a growing interest/belief in Shinto, a quote from you that really got my attention is “most of my work is about the memory in absent things”. Can you go deeper into that?
Yes, this is the theme of my work – ‘existence in the absence’. If someone dies, then suddenly you feel their existence more. The memory is stronger, even though the body is not there. The feeling or memory remains stronger.
13. Leaving home and embarking on a new journey, was there any nervousness or doubts about heading out to Germany, or were you ready?
I felt very free, finally I left Japan. I felt ready. In Japan, I finished studying, but I was not invited to create any museum shows or gallery shows as an artist, I was too young. In Japan, at the time there were only private galleries to rent, and I had no money to rent space for my show. I was very happy to come to Germany to study again and continue to create art.
14. Would you say that Marina Abramović (Chiharu's teacher in a German art school) changed your life?
I actually wanted to study with Magdalena Abakanowicz, but I accidently studied with Marina because my friend mixed up their names – this mix up changed my life.
16. The performance art training that you underwent, was it rigorous? And during that training, was there ever a moment where you wanted to quit?
It was not really a performance art training. The class fasted for one week. Others made sculptures, or paintings, I did a performance. I did not want to quit; it was hard but necessary.
17. What are your hard limits when it comes to performance art, I ask because I’ve seen that you’re willing to fast for days, go completely naked and more, so I’m just wondering where did you draw the line?
It is more about changing perception, like writing my name, just writing my name for one hour or to sit for one hour across from each other or to walk all day around the lake, it just takes a long time to do it. Our ordinary life is fast, we run and run, we are very busy, we never have time to write our name for one hour. If I want to do this for art, I will.
18. How important is family to you?
Very important because we do not exist alone, we need connection – I am connected to my husband and daughter, we share different countries (Japan, Korea and Germany) but are still strongly connected.
19. With a global pandemic happening this year and people not being allowed to gather in large groups for quite some time, how does that affect your art, now and in the foreseeable future?
For me as an artist, it was perfect to stay at home actually. I could concentrate on my work, I did not have to travel, I did not need to go to the openings and just stayed home and worked at the studio, it was a good time for me. But on the other side, all my exhibitions were cancelled or postponed. It was very hard and difficult to plan the next steps of the projects and to reschedule everything. Now, I try to make more work at the studio and send it to the exhibition spaces. Normally, I would travel to the site and create the installation at the museum space or gallery space, but because of Corona I could not fly, so now I am trying to create new works at the studio.
20. Can you tell us a bit about what’s next for Chiharu Shiota's artwork? What can we see in the upcoming project? What will be challenging?
Most difficult is still to plan everything since we don’t know what will happen in the future. Many exhibitions are not officially announced yet. But I will participate in a group show in Korea, and in Italy, and will exhibit a solo show in Vietnam in Autumn.
INTERVIEWED BY SPENCE JULIAN
WRITTEN BY ZANNA SHAPIRO
EDITED BY KAREN YABUTA
related posts
"Memory over reality" Crys Yin's reinvented childhood
Brushing eyes, combing toenails, flossing knees, and buying butts at the supermarket.
MOHRI SUZUKI IN NEW YORK CITY
Mohri Suzuki is acknowledged as one of the most promising calligraphy artists in Japan.
Saint Hoax: The PoPlitically Incorrect Artist
Saint Hoax is an artist who comes out of Syria and has a limitless mind of his own.
Culture Chanel Exhibition Opened in Venice
A new exhibition at the Ca’ Pesaro International Gallery of Modern Art in Venice explores Coco Chanel’s life through her love for literature, her life living amongst...
Marilyn Minter: Pretty/Dirty exhibition
Starting November 4, 2016, the public will have the chance to admire the retrospective of Marilyn Minter's work at the Brooklyn Museum.
MARC JACOBS FALL2016 CAMPAIGN
Marc Jacobs, the man who keeps the fashion industry oohing and ahhing has shocked us once more.
The Fashion World with The Coveteur Book
The widely popular fashion website, The Coveteur, is coming out with a beautiful coffee table book on October 18, 2016.
CARVED CRAYONS. COOL.
Have you heard of "Wax Nostalgic?" How about the guy who can make almost anything out of crayons? Well Hoang Tran is the man behind it all!
COLORING BOOK "MAGICAL JUNGLE" BY Johanna Basford
“I create books so they can make masterpieces,” says Johanna Basford, about her new coloring book, Magical Jungle, which was recently published.
Invader Invades the Earth with Street Art
Invader is a mystery. People don’t know his real name. They also don't know what he looks like.
MINI BAGS BY Phillip Nuveen
Phillip Nuveen in Wonderland: a mini fashion world
The Floppy Disk Portrait Artworks by Nick Gentry
Nick Gentry is an exceptional contemporary artist who compose oil painting portraits with obsolescent media like Floppy disks, vintage...
"OIDE" - The unique project by Jorgen Axelvall at The Embassy of Sweden in Tokyo
In the first of December 2015, the Embassy of Sweden in Tokyo invites you to the opening of...
The Allurement of MVRDV's Rotterdam Markhal
Rarely does a market place transform an entire city – usually it is museums or art galleries, sometimes a hotel that brings in the crowds.
Heineken Cube by Muti Randolph
“Art is about creating interesting experiences and should not be limited to museums and galleries,” says the Brazilian multimedia artist ...
TAO DOWNTOWN - THE LUXURY RESTAURANT DESIGNED BY ROCKWELL GROUP
The Tao Downtown is a luxurious restaurant located at 92 Ninth Avenue on West 16th Street, New York.
Jacqueline de Ribes: The Art of Style Exhibition
Years before the term “It Girl” become a thing, one woman, Jaqueline de Ribes, had already given it meaning.
152 Elizabeth by Tadao Ando - The Essence of Serenity
Tadao Ando, a phenomenal architect, was born in Osaka, Japan.
Nike+ 45 Grand: An Intimate Brand Experience
Imagine a space intentionally curated to your fitness needs—complete with skylights, modern architecture, and a bustling event schedule.
Explore How American Art Came to be, From Founding Families to Our Newest Immigrants, at the New Whitney Museum
“America is hard to see.
Less partial witnesses than he
In book on book have testified
Bad Dads VI: An art tribute to the films of Wes Anderson
This weekend in New York City, a group of over 70 artists is set to present the annual art exhibit "Bad Dads VI." In its sixth consecutive edition, the exhibition - which was...
"Yoko Ono: One Woman Show (1960-1971)" Debuts at the Museum of Modern Art
On May 17, 2015, “Yoko Ono: One Woman Show (1960-1971)” made its debut at the Museum of Modern Art.
Galleria Borghese Welcomes Azzedine Alaïa‘s Soft Sculpture
The well-known Italian art gallery, Galleria Borghese, breaks its tradition of displaying exclusively “hard” pieces of art, such as plaster, marble, bronze, and stone, to introduce “Soft Sculpture...
GLOSS
GLOSS The Work of Chris von Wangenheim
By Roger Padilha and Mauricio Padilha
Traveling to Jorge Sato's Toy Tokyo
Manami Okazaki’s latest photography book, Toy Tokyo, turns a playful lens on Japan’s capital.
Olafur Eliasson’s Gravity Stairs: A Journey Through Alternate Realities
Art is especially impactful when spectators are drawn in beyond simply viewing from a distance.
COS X SNARKITECTURE FOR SALONE DEL MOBILE
Held every year April 14th - 19th in Milan, Italy, Salone Del Mobile celebrates excellence in furniture craftsmanship and artistic vision.
NYC junk dolls turn to art
Annie Collinge makes NYC junk dolls into attention-grabbing works of art in her newest collection.
True Colors exhibits realism
Bernarducci Meisel Gallery takes realism to the next level, with their current exhibit titled True Colors.
Disney characters featured in photography collection
Have you even imagined the story of iconic Disney characters playing out in a city like New York; where would they be? What would they be doing?
HISTORY CAN BE HIP
What if Abraham Lincoln had been too busy blogging about top hats to abolish slavery? What if Mao Zedong was more concerned with drinking bubble tea than building China into a world power? These...
NYC’S HOTTEST NEW PARTY TO “DIG”
Any nightlife enthusiast knows the quintessential idea of the unadvertised party, raging on behind the modest door of an unassuming building as those who aren’t in the know pass...
Geometry And Illusion With Hideki Inaba
Hideki Inaba marries mechanical engineering with graphic design for his latest solo exhibit at New York’s +81 Gallery. The exhibit opened January 15 with a live installation alongside...