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It's Aya Takano's World

With her earlier works at the KaiKai Kiki Gallery created by Takashi Murakami along with Siebold Huis, and so many more, her exhibitions such as “Reintegrating Worlds” in 2008, and “The Ocean inside, The Flowers inside,” debuted in 2015 showcase Aya Takano to be a vessel in the arts.

In this new exhibit called “Beginning, Liminal, Ego” Takano expresses a love for Hong Kong with ten paintings and twenty four drawings that expand on an adventure between three teenagers and their daily lives in the city. To be even more specific, Takano gave us some insight on the exhibition with a Q&A.

I heard that the inspiration for your solo exhibition at Perrotin Hong Kong came from your Japanese ex-boyfriend's childhood memories in Hong Kong. How do you view this exhibition?

 

My last solo exhibition in Korea, I happened to have an experience that brought me closer to the hearts of the Korean people through a combination of various events. That experience made me want to approach the hearts of the people living in the country when I have a solo exhibition. I have had several solo exhibitions in Hong Kong over the past 10 years, and have been to several art fairs there, so I was familiar with the city myself. However, I felt that this was not enough, and then I remembered that my ex-boyfriend, who is still a good friend of mine, had spent his childhood in Hong Kong, and I had heard him talk about his memories many times. I wanted to depict Hong Kong as seen through the story of a man who has strong emotional and psychological ties with Hong Kong, and who also has a Japanese perspective.

 

What do you hope the audience will take away from this exhibition?

 

 What I want the audience to feel is always bliss beyond good and evil. I heard from the gallery staff that the time visitors spent in the gallery for this show was longer than usual. And I was told that each person reflected themselves and their families in the paintings, such as "this is me" or "this is my daughter". I thought that if you dig deep into the emotions, memories, and heart of one person in this case, my ex-boyfriend you may reach a place that we all share, like the collective unconscious.

 

Is there anything you would like to convey from these works?

 

In terms of Dragon Painting, This is based on my own experience. Some of my closest collectors live in Hong Kong, and with their guidance, I went trekking through the mountains of Hong Kong. It was a mystical experience to see the city and the sea from the mountain path, and to buy and eat sweets from a man standing in the middle of the mountain selling them. Also, I live near the Chinatown in Japan, and I often see the Dragon Dance and Lion Dance, which always gives me a strange and bright feeling. This piece is a combination of those feelings. In ancient times or the future, dragon festivals were/may be held in the mountains. When it comes to the Lantern Festival painting: This is based on a memory of my ex-boyfriend. I had heard many times that it was fantastic and fun to parade around with lanterns of various animals, and it left a strong impression on my mind. He also told me that there were lanterns of tanks in the 1980s, although I am not sure if they exist now. Lastly, the Typhoon painting: This is also based on my ex-boyfriend's childhood memories that I heard over and over. One day during a typhoon, he dropped a plastic bag filled with water from the roof of his apartment building. I think the statute of limitations has expired, but the bag was agitated by the wind and hit the windshield of an unattended Mercedes Benz parked in the parking lot, causing it to crack instantly. It was a typhoon, so the owner of the car didn't make a fuss when he noticed it later, but the image remained vivid in his mind, and it spread to my mind as well.

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