(1973 – 2005), Japan

Tetsuya Ishida Biography

Born in 1973, Shizuoka Japan, Tetsuya Ishida was a promising young artist living and working in Tokyo until he passed away in 2005.

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In most of his works, strains of the Japanese society came up as the result of its economical and technological growth in the 80s and its deep economical depression in the 90s are implied as a main theme. Instead of portraying these issues in an offensive manner, the artist uses himself as a motif to show his personal sympathy to the people in struggle.

Ishida had a usual childhood and was a perfectly adjusted student. However, during high school, his anxieties towards Japanese society and educational system developed. He found it to be an authoritarian and oppressive system as it’s shown in Prisoner (1999) that depicts this period in his life. In this painting, a man’s body is stuck in a school building with no energy to move or even think.

The sarin gas attack that took place at a subway station in Tokyo in 1995 gravely affected the artist and he even mentions it in his journal: 'One characteristic of Japanese psychology is the idea that all the Japanese people understand each other', meaning that all Japanese are expected to think in the same way which may be the cause of an oppressive system. Ishida describes the perpetrator of this crime as: 'A Japanese who was not in sync with everyone else.' Ishida shows his sympathy towards individuals who have isolated themselves because of the pressures of society, as he feels the same.

In Rehabilitation (2003), Ishida paints himself upside down resembling a cocoon hanging from a tree branch. In this painting, the outdoors are brought indoors, a recurring feature of his work. His head is metamorphosed with a wheel on his paintings. Ishida frequently merged his figure with mundane objects such as hangers, microscopes, backpacks and lavatories. Holes on his body give the impression of hollowness. He seems to depict a state of mind, the emptiness of his brain. He is asleep as if to recharge his energy, hence the IV drip attached to his body.

Baggage (1998) portrays bodies of identical men in the shape of boxes. Again, Ishida uses himself as a motif. Ishida objectifies human beings, getting out of a train. Humans are treated as cargos. The artist is depicting the daily life in the big Japanese cities, where the contemporary men have no space to develop their own individuality.

Even though Ishida died at the tender age of 31 in a train accident, he keenly committed  himself to art, leaving behind a collection of 180 artworks. His recognition has been significantly increasing even after his death. His works have been shown at Shizuoka Prefectural Museum, Shizuoka, Japan (2015, 2007), Asian Art Museum, San Francisco, USA (2014), Tonami Art Museum, Toyama, Japan (2014), Hiratsuka Museum of Art, Kanagawa, Japan (2014), Aishikaga Museum of Art, Tochigi, Japan (2013), Merima Museum, Tokyo, Japan (2008),  Yaizu Cultural Centre, Shizuoka, Japan (2007), Sungok Art Museum, Seoul, South Korea (2007), Sakura City Museum of Art, Shizuoka, Japan (2007). Collections featuring his works have been presented by Shizuoka Prefectural Museum and other renown institutions.

Tetsuya Ishida
representative works

Tetsuya Ishida
recent exhibitions

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Gagosian contemporary art gallery in 980 Madison Avenue, New York, United States
Gagosian Hong Kong, London, Los Angeles, New York, Paris +6
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