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The Message is The Medium

The show was presented by the new art app Arthur, and was organized by Paige Silveria. It’s on view in tandem with 'The Message is the Medium', another exhibition curated by Silveria and Rose Vickers. Below, please enjoy a brief Q&A with Horuichi about his work, this show, and what’s next on the horizon.

 

 

Not too long ago, you had your first exhibition, “New York,” in Tokyo. How much would you say you’ve grown since then?

 

I've grown or changed a lot. I think I was a designer who makes art but now I am an artist who does design too. Enjoying more to visually express my thoughts, ideas, characters, yet my personality.

 

What do mountains mean to you?

 

Self portrait, (childhood) memories, emotions, language without words, playground, a place gods live. And of course, Landscape.

 

 

 

The act of overlaying logos with anything is radical, let alone with the words “New York.” What are you trying to say when you do that?

 

I am trying to not say anything. I was looking for something very general and I think the word New York is like a public domain which means everybody can use it, in other words people can picture, imagine, feel something about NY when they see or hear the word New York. So I let them think about their New York story when they see my New York art works. My mission of making NY artworks is just to make them exist like ready-made.

 

With your work, does the idea come before the art, or does the art tend to be made before there’s a concept for it?

 

Both but I always try to equalize the idea and the art. I want to make art visually, physically, conceptually enjoyable.

 

Can you tell me about LQQK Studio? What has your time working with them been like?

 

LQQK studio is a Brooklyn based print operation studio that handles everything from silkscreen and multifaceted creative collective. They have amazing communities and I met so many great artists, designers, musicians, people through LQQK studio and now I can call them my friends. Moreover, more importantly I've learned how to do silkscreen printing as a professional. I can make art pieces with silkscreen by myself and by my hands.

 

A lot of the works featured in this show are hazy, or obscured to some extent. Can you take me into that decision? Is that just your preferred mode of operation, or is there something deeper behind it?

 

Unlike using brushes which paint very direct and specific, spray paint can paint wide and soft. I feel mountains in that way. I didn't try to paint the exact figure of the mountains. I tried to paint something abstract behind the mountains. I have a story from one of my collectors. She and her family are from New Mexico and her father was a professional rock climber. She told me her father died while rock climbing so when she sees paintings of mountains, she always feels devastated. However, she said my mountain painting is the first mountain artwork she really likes and one of the paintings went to her place. This is what I wanted to paint and I think I did it.

 

 

 

Is there ever a correct interpretation for your work? 

 

Surprisingly, I have gotten the correct interpretation from people so many times. A lot of people understand what I try to do even though my work is very varied.

 

You were raised in Japan, and now you’re living in Brooklyn. Do those two settings inform your work at all? If so, how?

 

I think so because I know one completely different culture, language, lifestyle, which is Japanese, than western/ American culture. It's like I can think of something in two ways. 

 

What was this show experience like? How did people receive it? 

 

This show just closed last Friday but it was great and everybody who came to the show seemed to enjoy it. People love the color palette and texture in the paintings. Also I made a mountain of sand which I used actual sand and people gave me really good compliments on the instaration/ sculpture. 

 

What’s up next for you?

 

I've been focusing on food figurative painting with oil paint. I want to talk about food throughout my work. Also keep making New York text artwork, self portrait series, egg drawings, some nonsense image prints with silkscreen and I am thinking of using clay to make some dish plates or maybe sculpture. Some collaborations are coming out this year too. It's a transition year so I'm just doing my best.

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