Suda’s sculptures of indigenous Japanese plants and flowers, including camelias, magnolias, and roses, as well as common weeds, are created with surprising realism and in true-to-life scale that at times borders on the miniscule. As works of installation art they are modest, effacing, and at times nearly invisible.
Lotus of wood
Chung King Project is pleased to announce Yoshihiro Suda’s first solo
exhibition in Los Angeles. Yoshihiro Suda (b. 1969), is
internationally known for his bold installations of delicate carved,
wooden plant life.
Suda’s sculptures of indigenous Japanese plants and flowers,
including camelias, magnolias, and roses, as well as common weeds,
are meticulously created with surprising realism and in true-to-life
scale that at times borders on the miniscule. As works of
installation art they are modest, effacing, and at times nearly
invisible. Yet these carvings have an overwhelming presence that
dominates their surroundings. His manner of exhibiting works in
unexpected locations urges the viewer to rediscover the work’s
surrounding environment and architectures with fresh eyes and to
experience spaces anew. As such there is a temporal, even
performative, aspect to his artistic practice. Ultimately Suda
locates significance in the moments of encounter between environment,
sculpted form, and viewer.
For the exhibition at Chung King Project Suda will create a special
installation for this space using two carved magnolia flowers, a
purple and a white one. The artist carves these fragile pieces from
magnolia wood before hand-painting them with traditional Japanese
pigments to produce exact replicas of these natural flowers, in this
particular case using the original material of the plant implying a
double bind.
Yoshihiro Suda who had a solo show at the Art Institute Chicago in
2003 has recently shown his work at the Louisana Museum Copenhagen,
Kunsthalle Graz and Beyeler Foundation Basel.
Chung King Project is a collaborative project between Mihai Nicodim
(Kontainer Gallery, Los Angeles), Nicholas Baker and Zoe Foster (fa
projects, London) and Friedrich Loock (Wohnmaschine, Berlin).
Private View: Saturday, 25 February 2006, 6-9 pm
Chung King Project
936 Chung King Road - Los Angeles