Press Release

MAKI Gallery and Gallery COMMON are pleased to announce the concurrent hosting of two solo exhibitions by Aichi-based artist Keisuke Tada. Tada’s debut show with MAKI Gallery, titled Phantom Emotion, will be held at the Omotesando gallery space and present a body of work that evinces the artist’s strong fascination for the relationship between real and fabricated constructs. Traversing the obscure boundary that separates reality and fiction, he creates paintings that capture the essence of his central theme: the conflict between ‘being there’ and ‘not’. When confronted with Tada’s works, our bodies are transported to a place where notions of time and space lose their function, evoking a sense of disorientation in our perception and awareness.

In this exhibition, the artist invites viewers on a journey into virtual spaces and the realm where reality and fiction intertwine. The Paintings of incomplete remains may initially resemble classical European paintings, yet they are actually based on landscapes experienced by Tada during his wanderings of the virtual plane. Referencing the compositions of the Barbizon School, exemplified by Millet’s work in 19th century France, Tada applies a patina to the surface of his paintings, thusly creating an artificially aged ambience that recalls the vistas once captured by artists traveling with small canvases in hand.

Phantom Emotion features approximately 100 works that portray various landscapes—including deserts, crags, mountains, skies, deteriorated structures, abandoned living spaces, flora, and fauna—all of which seem to have existed in some corner of history despite their fictitious nature. These subjects not only summon a spirit of adventure in the viewer but also subtly convey a sense of melancholy and solitude. Tada manipulates time by applying aging techniques to such imagined landscapes, where temporality is inherently absent. Through this mechanism, a gap emerges between the eternal expanse of the virtual world and the finite temporality and materiality of human beings, intensifying the paintings’ ephemeral quality.

The works’ small yet thick canvases are coated on their sides with pristine white, conjuring a distinct contrast with the detailed imagery on the painted surfaces. The patent juxtaposition suggests that the landscapes exist in an unreachable dimension, a space beyond tangible contact.

Furthermore, the exhibition presents a work from the Heaven’s Door __series, in which Tada crafts antique gates from paint so meticulously that they are nearly indistinguishable from the real thing. The artist subsequently subjects the gates to attacks with an axe, and the colours that emerge from this destructive gesture become an integral part of the painting process. Exhibited alongside the work is a video documenting Tada as he destroys the crafted doors using his own body; the act alludes to the inherent human desire to transcend limitations even while acknowledging their existence.

Both Paintings of incomplete remains and Heaven’s Door demonstrate a longing to explore and engage with imagined realms, as well as the poignant sense of detachment and loneliness brought about by the stark disconnect between such worlds and reality. As was the case for Tada himself, the experience of entering virtual spheres and becoming enamoured by their worldview may feel challenging to process and understand. Through this suite of work, the artist aims to create a unique space that intentionally exposes viewers to these elusive sensations and emotions.

Please take this opportunity to venture into a world hovering between existence and non-existence, one that is shaped by Tada’s exceptional skills and creative ingenuity.

Press Release: Written by Haruna Takeda

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Installation Views

Installation view from Phantom Emotion by Keisuke Tada
Installation view from Phantom Emotion by Keisuke Tada
Installation view from Phantom Emotion by Keisuke Tada
Installation view from Phantom Emotion by Keisuke Tada
Installation view from Phantom Emotion by Keisuke Tada
About the Artist

Born in 1986 in Aichi, Japan, Keisuke Tada received both his BFA and MFA in oil painting from Aichi University of the Arts in 2010 and 2012, respectively. Fascinated by the sensory experiences offered by video games and other virtual worlds, Tada creates paintings that explore the blurry boundary separating reality and fiction. His trace / dimension series mimics assemblages of wooden boards, metal chains, and ceramic tiles; his Heaven’s Door series resembles antique doors that seem to have been attacked with an axe. Despite their convincing appearances, the works are crafted entirely out of paint. In Paintings of incomplete remains, the artist fabricates time by artificially aging the surface of each canvas, yielding them a likeness to classical European paintings. It could be said that Tada, who investigates the conflict between what exists and what doesn’t through his unconventional techniques, brings new dimension to the medium of painting.

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Also Exhibiting at MAKI

About the Gallery

MAKI Gallery was first established in Tokyo in 2003, with the aim of promoting works by seminal avant-garde Japanese artists of the 1950s-60s. The gallery has since gradually shifted its focus to working with emerging contemporary artists. After opening a location in the bustling, high-end shopping district of Omotesando in 2014, MAKI Gallery opened an expansive, museum-caliber space in the growing gallery hub of Tennoz in 2020. Across these two outposts, MAKI Gallery presents a broad range of works by internationally active artists, including Mungo Thomson, Miya Ando, Susumu Kamijo, and Marius Bercea, while also introducing younger Japanese artists, such as Anne Kagioka Rigoulet, Keisuke Tada, and Takuro Tamura, to a global audience. The gallery has also participated in various international art fairs such as Frieze New York, The Armory Show, Asia NOW, and West Bund Art & Design.

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