YANCEY RICHARDSON: Hiroh Kikai : Persona
Project Gallery: August Sander
- 14 May 2009 to 2 July 2009

Current Exhibition


14 May 2009 to 2 July 2009

GALLERY HOURS: TUESDAY � SATURDAY, 10 � 6
YANCEY RICHARDSON GALLERY
535 West 22nd Street 3rd floor
NY 10011
New York, NY
New York
North America
p: 1 646-230-9610
m:
f: 1 646-230-6131
w: www.yanceyrichardson.com











Celebrating Shichi-go-san, a gala day for girls at ages three and seven, 2001
14 x 14 inch Gelatin Silver Print, Edition of 20
Illustrated: Asakusa Portraits, published by Steild/ICP, pg. 152
Web Links


YANCEY RICHARDSON GALLERY

Artist Links


Lisa Kereszi
Jodie Vicenta Jacobson



Artists in this exhibition: Hiroh Kikai, August Sander


Hiroh Kikai: PERSONA
May 14 - July 2, 2009

Reception for the Artist and Book Signing
Thursday, May 14, 2008, 6 - 8 PM

Project Gallery exhibition: August Sander: Selections

Yancey Richardson Gallery is pleased to present PERSONA, Hiroh Kikai!s second solo exhibition in the United States. Featured in the much acclaimed 2008 group
exhibition, Heavy Light: Recent Photography and Video from Japan at New York!s International Center of Photography, this is Kikai!s first solo U.S. presentation of
work from his Asaskusa Portraits series, a more than thirtyyear exploration of the photographic portrait begun in 1973. Both a humorist and a humanist, Kikai describes with affection the universality of the human condition, expressing with eloquence and formal precision the individual essence of each subject!s character.

Trained as a philosopher, Kikai turned to photography after discovering the work of Diane Arbus and Walker Evans. Since then, Kikai has focused on two parallel bodies of work: the Asakusa Portraits, a series on individuals encountered in the Asakusa district, an urban backwater of Tokyo historically known as a center for popular entertainment; and Tokyo Labyrinth, a dreamlike protagonist-free portrait of the city itself. Both series are made in black and white with the same handheld square format Hasselblad given to Kikai by his university philosophy professor at the outset of his career. As Kikai explains, he sees his portraits and cityscapes as two sides of the same coin.

Photographing outside Asakusa!s celebrated Sensoji Temple, Kikai poses his subjects against the plain exterior wall of the temple in order to let their individual personalities reveal themselves without being informed by the environment. Spending no more than ten minutes with each subject, Kikai exposes less than 12 frames of film, using only natural light and offering little direction. Another of what he describes as his �game rules� is to never approach strangers in recognizable designer clothes. By doing so he feels the picture would become invariably tied to a particular moment in time and interfere with the incorruptibility of the subject. Kikai generally works with what he describes as the �common folk� and even goes as far as to describe himself
as a �country bumpkin.� His image titles, such as �A young man who walked here from far 2 away�, reflect a summation of the notes made by Kikai during the very brief interaction with his subject, whether a truck driver, a nurse or a butoh dancer. Kikai!s philosophical approach to photographing his subject, stripping each character down to his essential attributes, has strong ties to the work of August Sander. Although he admires the work of earlier photographers like Evans, Arbus and Bellocq, Kikai credits his inspiration to the writers Anton Chekhov and William Faulkner and the filmmakers Andrej Wajda, Satyajit Ray and Shohei Imamura whose films he says �celebrate the instinct for survival and the appetite for life among the inhabitants of
society!s lower depths.�

Hiroh Kikai!s work is the subject of eleven books, among them a major monograph, Hiroh Kikai: Asakusa Portraits published in 2008 by ICP/Steidl. In addition to last year!s International Center of Photography exhibition, his work has been included in exhibitions at the Neue National Galerie, Berlin; Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography; Museum of Modern Art, Toyama, Japan; and Center for Creative Photography, Tucson, Arizona.

For visuals or further information, please contact Tracey Norman at tnorman @ yanceyrichardson.com


SIGN UP FOR NEWSLETTERS
Click on the map to search the regions



Recent exhibitions highlighted in the weekly Feature Newsletter



KUNST HALLE SANKT GALLEN presents David Renggli - Scaramouche


17 August - 27 October 2013

David Renggli - in some respects a prodigy of the Swiss art scene - has repeatedly aroused the curiosity of the public for more than ten years thanks to a unique mixture of themes and forms, of spectacle, humour and poetry.

Read On...



The Showroom, London presents Ricardo Basbaum: re-projecting (london)


12 July - 17 August 2013

The Showroom is delighted to present re-projecting (london), a major new commission by Brazilian artist Ricardo Basbaum, and the first significant presentation of his internationally renowned artwork in the UK.

Read On...