Takuma Hayashi Exhibition Vol. 3 Figurative and Abstract at Nadoya Ebisu, Tokyo Apr 30 – May 30 2021
In identifying itself as both venue and a concept Nadoya asserts itself as a fugitive art space. Eluding clear definition, it slips into violet shadows, somewhere between a gallery and an architectural aggregation, the sum of its past histories. Discoverable within a partly renovated kominka house in Ebisu, it sits quietly, just beyond a small and tidy car park, surrounded by somewhat taller apartment blocks, its back to the trees. Likewise, the art it presents has to be looked for among the palimpsest of layered histories; with layers and narratives either jostling for or hiding from attention. The result is a space for nuance and subtlety; where every detail could be the art, or not, as it could also be merely a remnant of another time, another use. Like the light switches. I really liked the light switches. Paradoxically the effect is to sublimate the art and to magnify the ordinary, which is so much unlike a white cube gallery experience. As a visitor you need to look hard, and once you do, it rewards you with an experience beyond looking.
Installation views: Takuma Hayashi Vol.3 Figurative and Abstract at Nadoya (Photo: Yukikaku Ito, courtesy Nadoya)
Nadoya is currently featuring the work of Takuma Hayashi in ‘Figurative and Abstract’. Echoing the functional fluidity of the space, the artist asks questions of the relationship between what is abstract, concrete or figurative. While these terms may have specific meanings in art history, here at Nadoya those ideas seem far more open to elaboration. Or they may be relegated to their plain and ordinary meanings, which is refreshing. Takuma is a graphic designer and describes his design process and the exhibition itself as ‘an attempt to visualise the relationship’ between these concepts.