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Etsu Egami

Time

Bangkok Space

December 21, 2024 - January 26, 2025

Press

Tang Contemporary Art is pleased to announce the solo exhibition of Etsu Egami, “Time,” at our Bangkok space, which runs from December 21, 2024 to January 26, 2025. This exhibition will showcase more than ten of the artist’s newest works.

Humans Think, Therefore They Paint: Etsu Egami's Exploration

 

Today, we are still lingering in the twilight of "modern painting," a period often referred to as the "post-painting" era. How long this phase will last remains uncertain. However, humans will never lose the desire to paint, and thus painting will continue. Yet if it remains merely a desire, it risks becoming a repetition of the past. What we seek is "painting that transcends painting," which goes beyond surface-level and material innovations.

 

In this context, Etsu Egami consciously takes her own experiences as a starting point, creating works themed around language, human connection, and the interplay of "communication and misunderstanding." In her earlier series Star Time, she portrayed Japanese literary figures. This time, she delves deeper into the portraits of thinkers, writers, and painters who have shaped human thought. The subjects span across Asia and the West, including Freud, Laozi, Dostoevsky, Kafka, Tagore, Nietzsche, Guiguzi, Confucius, as well as Cézanne and Warhol.

 

For instance, Etsu Egami reads the books of these thinkers and writers. The inspiration and insights she gains from this reading drive her to capture their visage and essence. If photographs exist, she might refer to them, but their absence does not deter her. Her portraits are shaped by their intellectual essence, rather than external appearances. What matters is not the photographic surface but the depth of their thoughts. To depict this intellectual essence is, in itself, an act of "communication." Naturally, this also invites "misunderstanding." The treatment of the background in these works is similar to her Star Time series, comprising horizontal stripes of various colors.

 

In any case, the painting's theme serves as an entry point for viewers to engage in dialogue with the work. Interpretation, of course, is up to the audience. For example, I might illustrate this by comparing two works: Freud and Laozi.  

 

In Freud, the eyes, nose, and chin are relatively discernible, while swirling lines spread across the forehead. The background on the left features blues and greens, while purples dominate the right and lower sections. Whether this resembles Freud's physical appearance is irrelevant. What matters is that the image evokes something akin to the experience Freud described in The Interpretation of Dreams. Through her strokes and lines, Etsu Egami reflects her reading experience and the questions she pondered.  

 

In contrast, Laozi resists facial recognition even upon close examination. The background consists of vivid horizontal stripes. If one were to ask, "What is this?" the answer might be as elusive as the four short blue stripes extending from the upper right to the lower left. Even if they seem like living beings, they remain indefinable. Etsu Egami painted them precisely this way. For me, rather than a portrait or a living entity, the work conveys an abstract gesture or form that symbolizes the essence of this thinker, Laozi.  

 

Modern painting has been deconstructed by minimalism and conceptual art down to its "zero point." So, what comes next?  

 

When one engages with a thinker’s ideas, it often triggers a boundless, expansive sensation within. This internal space feels as vast as the universe. Etsu Egami seeks to translate this "expansion of thought" into her art, turning it into an "expansion of pictorial space." This "transmutation" is her unique artistic expression. Her unprecedented attempt is forging a new form of painting in an era where the possibilities of painting seem to be reaching their limits.

Text by Shigeo Chiba
Translation by JY 

Works

EXHIBITING WORKS

The Birth of Venus No.1 198 x 558.5 cm (198 x 279.5 cm x 2P) Oil on canvas 2024

The Birth of Venus No.2 197.5 x 287 cm Oil on canvas 2024

The Birth of Venus N0.3 199 x 139.5 cm Oil on canvas 2024

Sigmund Freud 198.5 x 140.5 cm Oil on canvas 2024

LAO ZI 199 x 139.5 cm Oil on canvas 2024

Keith Haring 137 x 93 cm Oil on canvas 2024

Andy Warhol 137.5 x 92.5 cm Oil on canvas 2024

Paul Cézanne 137 x 92.5 cm Oil on canvas 2024

Franz Kafka 98.5 x 60 cm Oil on canvas 2024

Fyodor Dostoevsky 99 x 60 cm Oil on canvas 2024

Rabindranath Tagore 98 x 59.5 cm Oil on canvas 2024

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche 99 x 60.5 cm Oil on canvas 2024

KONG ZI 99 x 60.5 cm Oil on canvas 2024

GUI GUZI 99.5 x 60 cm Oil on canvas 2024

Artist

ARTIST

Etsu Egami portrait photo.jpg

ETSU EGAMI

b. 1994, Tokyo, Japan

 

Etsu Egami is the representative of the third generation of postwar Japanese artists. Born in Tokyo in 1994. Her work is very active internationally. She studied abroad at the Karlsruhe University of Design in Germany and the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, China. In 2024, as one of the "Asia Pacific U30 Outstanding Young Leaders 2024" she was selected along with Yuzuru Hanyu and Jackson Wang, Eileen Gu during the APEC period.

 

Received the 2021 FORBES ASIA "30 Under 30 Who Will Change the World" award as the youngest artist. Exhibited at the VOCA exhibition in 2020, she was sent to New York by the Agency for Cultural Affairs of the Japanese government as a talented artist in 2021.

 

Growing up in the United States and Europe, and currently living and working in China, Etsu Egami experienced various communication barriers she encountered as a result. Now, her works was shown at the Asian Art Museum San Francisco and the WHAT Museum in Tokyo.

 

Etsu Egami received the BEST ARTIST PRIZE in 2023. Major public collections include DIOR (France), He Art Museum (Guangdong), WoodOne Museum (Hiroshima), IRIS ART MUSEUM (Suzhou), Garage Art Museum (Moscow), HUAWEI (Shenzhen), and others.

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