%C2%A9 Shinro Ohtake
Cloth adhesive tape and resin on laminated chromogenic analog print mounted on wooden panelexpand_more
The Ethel Morrison Van Derlip Fundexpand_more 2016.81
Shinro Ohtake is one of Japan’s leading and most innovative contemporary artists. His practice extends from the creation of visual arts projects and artist books to sound and architectural projects. Ohtake’s vast scrapbook collection—first begun in 1977—form the backbone of his multifaceted practice, which ranges from painting, to assemblage, collage, drawing, monumental sculpture, architectural environments, and experimental noise music. Through his noise band JUKE/19 (1978–1982), Ohtake has also influenced the direction of experimental music in Japan.
In the mid-1980s, Ohtake began to habitually record his dreams through works on paper and collage. These vague, shifting images would appear to him as he viewed the underside of his eyelids. According to the artist, “[t]he colors of the underside of the eyelid are truly mysterious colors. The real world glimpsed through the shutter-speed filter of a single layer of skin opening and closing over the surface of the eyeball transforms momentarily into another world. The underside of the eyelid is the only dreamscreen we have to look at when we shut our eyes.”
The Retina series gives these vague shapes that lingered hazily in the artist’s mind a concrete form by means of photography. Through a process of camera-less manipulation of positive film in a solution, the artist creates liquid images in a dreamy palette of aquarelle colors that become abstract representations of time and memory.
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© Shinro Ohtake