
Nonaka-Hill Los Angeles announces their Fall group exhibition, Tokonoma Workshop, on view from November 18 - December 20, 2025. With Opening reception on Satruday November 22, 2025, 6-8 pm.
Tokonoma Workshop reinterprets the traditional Japanese, raised, shallow alcove space used to display art objects such as hanging scrolls (掛け軸 kakejiku), ikebana flower arrangements, incense burners, or fine art ceramics. The exhibition aims to explore the peculiar phenomenon of this architectural trope which incorporates a seasonal curatorial practice into “good homes” as part of Japanese family life.
Tokonoma Workshop is a chance to show off unexpected pairings by artists from our program with works by artists based in Los Angeles and beyond. In the gallery, 2D work and 3D works come together with seasonal, natural elements and ikebana arrangements made by Kyoko Oshiro. Not all domestic tokonomas are havens of neat arrangements, we’ve seen chaotic tokonoma in Japanese homes. You could interpret those tokonoma as our insane junk drawers - a place that ends up with pile ups of works, old magazines, vintage TVs not working or dead plants. There will be a variety of tonokoma spaces at Nonaka-Hill on exhibit, as the weeks pass, the gallery team will update and shift elements, subtracting and adding works. Initially elegant arrangements may naturally arrive at disarray - just like at any “good home.”
Adam Alessi, Calvin Marcus, Carol Rama, Daisuke Fukunaga, Peter Fischli / David Weiss, Imaemon Imaizumi XIII, Jiro Nagase, Kaz Oshiro, Kentaro Kawabata , Kenzi Shiokava, Keyikō Nishimura III, Kiyomizu Kyubey | Rokubey VII, Kiyomizu Rokubey VIII, Koichi Enomoto, Masaomi Yasunaga, Nakahara Nantenbō (1839–1925), Nicolas G. Miller, Peter Doig, Rando Aso, Saori (Madokoro) Akutagawa, Satoru Hoshino, Sawako Goda, Shio Kusaka, Silke Otto Knapp, Siobhan Furnary, Sterling Ruby, Sofu Teshigahara, Takuro Tamayama, Tatsuo Ikeda, Tatsuzo Shimaoka, Thomas McDonell, Ulala Imai











Nonaka-Hill is a contemporary art gallery in Los Angeles with a focus on Japan, founded in 2018 by Rodney and Taka Nonaka-Hill.
Rodney was a partner at Marc Foxx Gallery, Los Angeles and previously worked with Jay Gorney Modern Art in New York. Taka has worked as an art director in the Japanese fashion industry.
Designed by architect Linda Taalman, the gallery is located inside a strip mall, featuring a floor to ceiling glass storefront facade, breaking away from ‘white cube’ gallery design. Above the front entrance, the gallery has maintained the original Best Cleaners signage of the former tenants. Inside, two main exhibition spaces are divided by a central corridor which resembles a traditional Japanese tokonoma area. The gallery’s rear viewing room displays additional artworks and ikebana.

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