a large, vase-like sculpture casts floral shadows across two viewers in a large gallery

“Gravity and Grace” (2023), installation view at National Art Center. Photo by Keizo Kioku. All images courtesy of National Art Center

In “Gravity and Grace,” Japanese artist Shinji Ohmaki poses a broad, if not daunting, question: what does it mean to exist? The installation, which features an imposing vessel carved with flora and fauna, radiates from the center and casts shadows in varied sizes and opacities around the gallery. Bulbous near the base with a slimmer neck that reaches toward the ceiling, the work’s shape evokes the tower of a nuclear power plant and spills light in every direction.

This iteration of “Gravity and Grace,” which is part of a series ongoing since 2016, is included in Ohmaki’s exhibition Interface of Being on view now at Tokyo’s National Art Center. The solo show features works made in response to the devastating 2011 earthquake and tsunami that killed nearly 20,000 people and caused the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant to melt down and release radioactive water.

Reaching up to a whopping 840,000 lumens, “Gravity and Grace” harnesses the interplay of light and shadow to critique modern society’s dependence on energy, literally mapping illuminated patterns onto the viewers who pass by. The contrast also draws attention to nature’s cycles and the artist’s enduring interest in time and space, particularly the reminder that we all inhabit this planet for a relatively brief moment.

If you’re in Tokyo, you can see Interface of Being, which also includes a gossamer sculpture that undulates across the gallery like billowing fabric, through December 25. Otherwise, find more from Ohmaki on his site and Instagram.

 

a detail image of a delicate floral carving illuminated by light

Detail of “Gravity and Grace” (2023). Image courtesy of A4 Art Museum

a large, vase-like sculpture casts floral shadows across two viewers in a large gallery

“Gravity and Grace” (2023), installation view at National Art Center. Photo by Keizo Kioku

a detail image of a delicate floral carving illuminated by light

Detail of “Gravity and Grace” (2023)

a large scale wave like sculpture billowing across an entire gallery

“Liminal Air Space—Time Vacuum Fluctuations,” installation view National Art Center. Photo by Keizo Kioku

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article Botanical Patterns Spill from Shinji Ohmaki’s Existential Vessel appeared first on Colossal.

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