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HOME > FOCUS> Soju Tao, Michiro Tokushige Two-person exhibition at takefloor
Soju Tao, Michiro Tokushige
Two-person exhibition at takefloor

Jeffrey Ian Rosen
Soju Tao
Installation view Michiro Tokushige
Garden09
Soju Tao
Installation view
takefloor, 2006
© artist and takefloor
Michiro Tokushige
Garden09
Oil on canvas, 80x117cm, 2005
© artist and takefloor
takefloor, located in Ebisu, is one of the more promising of a recently emerging second generation of Tokyo contemporary gallery spaces. Owned and operated by artist Kazuyuki Takezaki, takefloor has quickly gained an international reputation as a home for young Japanese artists willing to experiment; artists whose work is challenging and which is understanding of and engaged with contemporary art discourse. This is not surprising, as owner Kazuyuki Takezaki has himself exhibited with Paris-based gallery Yvon Lambert and in Tokyo with Roppongi based gallery Ota Fine Arts.

Presently on view in the gallery, a room not much larger than three tatami mats, is a two-person exhibition of artists Michiro Tokushige and Soju Tao.

Michiro Tokushige is the oldest in the gallery's growing stable of young artists. Born in 1971 and having studied at both the Nagoya Institute of Technology and the Nagoya Art University, Tokushige approaches art making in an openly experimental, process oriented manner. This is evident in the present exhibition as the artist has made a switch from his installation-based art of the past to the production of paintings and (not on view) works on paper. More imaginative schematics than paintings proper, Tokushige's works feature painted images of trees and fanciful organic forms within a forest-like landscape. The paintings represent an attempt by the artist to move from the more abstract, imaginary architecture of his installation and sculptural work back to the "drawing board" and a return to more straightforward representation. The resulting paintings are less "unfinished" than in-process and the playful nature of the work is ultimately rewarding.

Born in 1977, Soju Tao was a student of the SLADE School of Fine Art, London. Tao takes a similarly experimental approach to art practice; the artist subverts any notion of quality in his work through the production of countless pieces in a wide variety of media with widely varying stylistic results. On view at takefloor, displayed in a series of closed binders which the viewer is invited to investigate, is a series of works on paper which are part of the artist's ongoing project in which work is produced and distributed by the artist's own pseudo-company "Hachimoku Shokai". A direct engagement with the notion of cultural production, Hachimoku Shokai effectively cancels itself out as a business; the company is unable to control the production of its sole worker, the artist, and its resulting company identity is undefined. Visitors to the gallery, as art consumers, may be presented with a childlike drawing, a hastily constructed sculpture or a sound piece. It is difficult to determine which, if any, defines the Hachimoku company aesthetic. If one accepts the validity of Tao's practice then it would be difficult not to find something to like within the seemingly endless selection of works contained within the binders on offer at takefloor; regardless, the artist's vitality makes for an engaging experience.

Soju Tao
Untitled Michiro Tokushige
Installation view; Uma no Hone no Dokoka
Soju Tao
Untitled
Ink jet printing, pencil, 21x29.7cm, 2005
© artist and takefloor
Michiro Tokushige
Installation view; Uma no Hone no Dokoka, 2005
© artist and takefloor
Soju Tao, Michiro Tokushige Exhibition
takefloor / http://www5f.biglobe.ne.jp/~tailgate/
24 March to 22 April 2006