Chiharu Shiota Biography

Known for her web-like yarn-based art installations, Japanese artist Chiharu Shiota's practice is motivated by the omnipotence of memory. An exhibitor in numerous international art shows, Chiharu Shiota represented Japan at the 56th Venice Biennale.

Read More

Early Years

Shiota, who now lives and works in Berlin, was born in Osaka in 1972. The artist's early studies at Kyoto Seika University, Japan, were accompanied by a semester exchange to the Canberra School of Art, Australian National University, Australia, where her aims shifted towards amalgamating painting, performance and the body.

No longer satisfied with art for art's sake, the next step for Shiota after Kyoto was Germany and an intense period of study under artist Marina Abramović, known for her performance practice that tests physical and emotional thresholds. Chiharu's time with Abramović seeded clarity in her practice in both concept and approach, now prioritising the relationship between memory and objects as well as the power of absence.

Her newfound ethos was apparent in her performance, Try and Go Home (1997), where she dug a cavity in the earth and rolled naked into and out of the space. Here, her interest in displacement and the affectivity of positive and negative space was born.

Chiharu Shiota Artworks

Chiharu Shiota's is best known for her mixed-media web-like art installations using yarn in combination with an array of objects. Shiota confronts her own experiences by cultivating special spaces with a physical and emotional passage in mind.

Memory of Skin

Shiota's life experiences—of leaving her country and facing illness as a young woman—are woven into her practice, which, in its grace, welcomes others to co-exist. Works such as Memory of Skin (2000) saw inordinately long dresses hung high and constantly dripping with water. These dresses were a metaphor for cyclical thoughts. Installations that incorporated empty beds, such as During Sleep (2000), heralded a similar feeling. In these symbolic objects, thoughtfully framed by colour, the viewer finds cues to birth, sickness and death.

The Key in Hand

Now settled in Berlin, the artist' more recent artworks are characterised by a mixture of performance, sculpture and drawing in space with found objects mostly woven into yarn webs. From a collection of mismatched shoes to suitcases, dresses, keys, pages from a book, bed frames and doors, the materials she introduces have lived elsewhere but are summoned as an artery for a personal and collective psychological experience.

When Shiota suspends mementoes in tessellating string, the viewer is led to think about both containment and protection. In The Key in the Hand, presented at the 2015 Venice Biennale in the Japan Pavilion, plumes of red yarn were dotted with keys. These inverted waves floated above a series of boats like hands.

Coloured Yarn

In a conversation with Ocula Magazine in 2016, Shiota said of her use of yarn, 'It is soft and I use it like a mirror of my feelings ... Yarn has tension like a human relationship.' While line and materiality are obvious keynotes in her work, colour is critical. Chiharu Shiota exclusively selects red, black or white yarn for the pregnant and hollowed spaces she creates.

The metaphor is not didactic, her audience is invited to associate meaning or feeling with colour. Black has historically accompanied works exploring illness and death, such as Conscious Sleep (2016), for the 20th Biennale of Sydney, whereas snow-like threads swathe boats with a hopeful energy in Chiharu Shiota's Where are we going? (2017) and Memory of the Ocean (2017), both displayed at Le Bon Marché Rive Gauche, Paris. Prior to working almost exclusively with red, Chiharu's use of black yarn and symbolic objects pointed to the inexplicability of the universe and pain.

It's not difficult to imagine that Shiota's continued use of red is emblematic of a journey, the movement of blood through our veins or the 'fated path' red string represents in Japanese, Chinese and Korean cultures. Red couples positivity and pathos. For example, in a red yarn installation Dialogue From DNA (2004) we are attune to both loss and the inevitability of change. In Uncertain Journey (2019) that explores themes of the unpredictable journey of life, red yarn simultaneously suggests veins and nerves, and the complex web of ever evolving human connection.

Video and Performance

Traces of Maring Abramović's influence and others can be found in the sustained performative elements of Chiharu's practice. From the early 2000s, the artist made a number of video works in which the artists body was a key element.

As part of some of the early Bed-based instillations such as Breathing from the Earth (2000) and During Sleep (2002), the artist herself or other women carried out performative actions getting in and out of the beds.

In the 2010 video Wall, the artist's body is entangled in tubes carrying a blood-like substance. In simulating these external restrictions, the artist explores the metaphorical walls within her own blood: race, culture, gender and other sources of artificial human boundaries of division.

Exhibitions

Chiharu Shiota has been the subject of solo exhibitions and group exhibitions internationally.

Shiota's solo exhibitions include Memory of Water, Towada Art Centre, Aomori, Japan (2021); The Web of Time, Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington, (2020); The Soul Trembles, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo (2019); Infinity Lines, SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah, GA (2017); Over the Continents, Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC (2014); Crossing Lines, Manege, Moscow (2013); Breath of the Spirit, The National Museum of Art, Osaka (2008); In Silence, Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art, Hiroshima (2004).

Chiharu Shiota group exhibitions include STILL ALIVE, The Albertinum, Dresden (2021); 100 Jahre Revolution - Berlin 1918/19, Kulturprojekte, Berlin (2019); Nine Journeys Through Time, Palazzo Reale Milano, Milan (2018); East Asia Feminism: FANTasia, Seoul Museum of Art, Seoul (2015); and Women In-Between: Asian Women Artists 1984-2012, Fukuoka Asian Art Museum (2012).

Website and Instagram

Chiharu Shiota's website can be found here and Chiharu Shiota's Instagram can be found here.

Ocula | 2022

Chiharu Shiota
featured artworks

View 22 More
Connected to the Universe CS/D 231232 by Chiharu Shiota contemporary artwork textile
Chiharu Shiota Connected to the Universe CS/D 231232, 2023 Thread on canvas
41 x 31 cm
NF/NIEVES FERNÁNDEZ Request Price & Availability
Connected to the Universe CS/D 231231 by Chiharu Shiota contemporary artwork textile
Chiharu Shiota Connected to the Universe CS/D 231231, 2023 Thread on canvas
41 x 31 cm
Sold
NF/NIEVES FERNÁNDEZ
State of Being (First Aid) by Chiharu Shiota contemporary artwork sculpture
Chiharu Shiota State of Being (First Aid), 2023 Metal frame, first aid kit, thread
80 x 45 x 45 cm
Templon Request Price & Availability
State of Being by Chiharu Shiota contemporary artwork sculpture
Chiharu Shiota State of Being, 2023 Metal frame, thread
168 x 92 x 67 cm
Sold
Templon
Memory Under the Skin by Chiharu Shiota contemporary artwork works on paper, sculpture
Chiharu Shiota Memory Under the Skin, 2023 Dress, motor, steel, paint
285 x 150 x 150 cm
Templon Request Price & Availability
Red Line XXIII by Chiharu Shiota contemporary artwork painting, works on paper, drawing
Chiharu Shiota Red Line XXIII, 2012 Oil pastel on paper
48 x 36 cm
Sold
Mimmo Scognamiglio Artecontemporanea
Red Line XXII by Chiharu Shiota contemporary artwork painting, works on paper, drawing
Chiharu Shiota Red Line XXII, 2012 Oil pastel on paper
48 x 36 cm
Sold
Mimmo Scognamiglio Artecontemporanea
In Between by Chiharu Shiota contemporary artwork painting, works on paper
Chiharu Shiota In Between, 2015 Oil stick and pencil on paper
17 x 24 cm
Sold
Mimmo Scognamiglio Artecontemporanea
View 22 More

Chiharu Shiota
recent exhibitions

View 6 More
View 6 More

Represented by these
Ocula Member Galleries

View 6 More

Chiharu Shiota in
Ocula Magazine

Read 9 More
Read 9 More
Learn more about the market for works
by Chiharu Shiota.
Enquire for a confidential discussion. Enquire Now
Simon Fisher, Ocula CEO
Ocula Advisor
Simon Fisher
Christoper Taylor, Ocula Advisor
Ocula Advisor
Christopher Taylor
Eva Fuchs, Ocula Advisor
Ocula Advisor
Eva Fuchs
Rory Mitchell, Ocula Advisor
Ocula Advisor
Rory Mitchell
Ocula discover the best in contemporary art icon.
Follow Chiharu Shiota
Stay ahead.
Receive updates on new artworks,
exhibitions and articles.
Your personal data is held in accordance with our privacy policy.
Follow
Do you have an Ocula account?
Ocula discover the best in contemporary art icon.
Get Access
Join Ocula to request price and availability of artworks, exhibition price lists and build a collection of favourite artists, galleries and artworks.
Do you have an Ocula account? Login
What best describes your interest in art?

Subscribe to our newsletter for upcoming exhibitions, available works, events and more.
By clicking Sign Up or Continue with Facebook or Google, you agree to Ocula's Terms & Conditions. Your personal data is held in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
Thank you for joining us. Just one more thing...
Soon you will receive an email asking you to complete registration. If you do not receive it then you can check and edit the email address you entered.
Close
Thank you for joining us.
You can now request price and availability of artworks, exhibition price lists and build a collection of favourite artists, galleries and artworks.
Close
Welcome back to Ocula
Enter your email address and password below to login.
Reset Password
Enter your email address to receive a password reset link.
Reset Link Sent
We have sent you an email containing a link to reset your password. Simply click the link and enter your new password to complete this process.
Login