KOSAKU KANECHIKA is pleased to present yoretsuremotsure, a solo exhibition by Junko Oki, from 15 October–19 November 2022.
Through unique embroidery and careful attention, Junko Oki inserts new life into aged textiles and instruments. These objects, with years-worth of stories already engraved into them, are revived by Okiʼs hand through a series of attentive stitches. In the artistʼs solo exhibition anthology in the tearoom space of the Hagi Uragami Museum up to spring 2021, Oki presented an installation work including seven-thousand spools of thread gathered from throughout Japan. For her subsequent solo exhibition Yobitsugi at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, she reworked and revitalised exhibits from anthology.
Oki talked of the intertwining of new and old times in these works. They include everything that came into being, and times that once existed but are now gone. The core of Okiʼs creative process involves discovering new horizons through layered impressions of time.
Oki provided the following statement for this show:
Seeing someone thinking about what to call her baby before it was born, I decided to give a name to my stitching. Whatever I do, there are always tangles and places where the threads are taut or twisted. The word that came to me like some kind of secret code to describe this was 'yoretsuremotsure', which is an amalgam of Japanese words expressing these traits. The word brings together things that are typically seen as unwelcome intrusions in hand stitched work, but when I repeat it to myself, 'yoretsuremotsure' begins to feel like a sublimation of the time I invest in each work. So I decided to use it from now on to refer to this kind of capricious stitching.
Yoretsuremotsure—the thread gets tangled practically every time you stitch. However, securing the tangles in place instead of disentangling them brings an understand that accepting entanglement is an important part of needlework. Taut, tight threads can manifest in many different ways depending on the weave, thickness, and lustre of the fabric, creating what appear to be furrows etched by time. And, when lots of stitching has become twisted, shadows emerge on the fabric, seemingly giving it muscles and the will to move on its own accord.
In addition to characterising Okiʼs creative process, these stitching artefacts, which would normally be considered undesirable, serve as the wellspring of ingenuity in her work. And, as the artist points out, prompted by this word that she found herself uttering as a string of sounds, she focused anew on the yoretsuremotsure and began to discover human forms above her work. Discovering this word opened up a new path for her creativity.
Oki says that each time her art has been viewed by many people at exhibitions, she feels she has been given an opportunity to redo her life all over again. She states 'Iʼll give it a name, and then start again from there. Itʼs a chance to confirm that I have complete freedom.' A blending together takes place through the making of countless stitches, respecting and accepting the many things that have come before and times gone by. In order for this to happen, the artist must give herself over completely to something new. That is freedom, and it may very well be the reason why Okiʼs art is so powerful and overwhelms viewers.
The exhibition consists of ten or so new works.
Press release courtesy KOSAKU KANECHIKA.
TERRADA Art Complex 5F
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Shinagawa-ku
Tokyo, 140-0002
Japan
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