Press Release

We are pleased to present work by gallery artists who offer a glimpse into our diverse programming. Working across a variety of mediums, each of the artists takes a process-driven approach. Whether it's yarn on canvas or fibres plucked from handmade Japanese paper, the materiality of the work is immediately apparent.

At a time when most of our interaction with images takes place in a flat, virtual realm, viewing such tactile pieces in person is impactful. Seen together, the works offer a distinctly corporeal experience that engages the senses and invites viewers to take time away from the bustle of daily life to pause, slow down and reflect.

The Artists

New York artist Miya Ando (b. 1973, Los Angeles) has achieved critical acclaim for her luminous paintings and large-scale installations that articulate transient aspects of the natural world. Ando layers inks, dyes, resins and often micronised pure silver on metal canvases. Recent works centre on fugitive imagery of clouds captured at precise moments in the twilight hours of dusk.

Inspired by the use of yarn in African culture, Nigerian-American artist Osi Audu (b. 1956, Nigeria) creates works that explore 'the skin of things.' Part of the New York artist's larger investigation into human consciousness, the canvases on view—made using an intricate needlework technique—explore the body's visceral and physical response to experiences that create goosebumps.

Hiroshi Senju (b. 1958, Tokyo) is widely recognised for his immersive waterfall paintings. He applies pigments often derived from natural materials onto mulberry paper using a minimalist language rooted in Abstract Expressionism. His intensely physical process involves pouring pigments downward from the top of paintings mimicking the trajectory of gushing water. He also uses spray guns and airbrushes to create a sensation of mist.

Intricate paper constructions by Detroit-based artist Neha Vedpathak (b. 1982, India) are the result of a painstaking yet meditative process. She plucks handmade Japanese paper with a pushpin, separating the fibres until the paper is transformed into a lace-like material that she then stitches together and stains with pigments.

Robert Yasuda (b. 1940, Hawaii) is known for his luminous multi-panel works on sculpted wood panels that transmit and transform light. The New York-based artist begins by shaping the panels, which are up to two inches thick, with chisels and grinders. Softening harsh vertical lines, he introduces bowed, gently sloping edges and upturned corners. He wraps the wood in diaphanous cotton, adding as many as forty layers of pearlescent acrylic paint, suspending the fabric amid layers of luminous colour.

Beijing artist Zheng Lu (b. 1978, Inner Mongolia) creates gravity-defying sculptures of splashes of water captured in midair. Pulsing with movement, their fluid, animated forms are charged with the energy (qi) of the universe, belying their steel composite. Water, a shapeless medium that can be potent or supple, dynamic or latent, can take on abundant meanings and serve as a tangible model embedded with ideas. For Zheng, it is a substance symbolic of change, self-reflection and the passage of time.

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Artists Exhibiting

Also Exhibiting at Sundaram Tagore Gallery

About the Gallery

Established in 2000 in New York City, Sundaram Tagore Gallery represents established and emerging artists from around the globe, specialising in work that is aesthetically and intellectually rigorous, infused with humanism and art historically significant. The gallery was founded with a mission to show that some of the best and most meaningful art was being created by artists deeply engaged in cross-cultural explorations. Our international roster of artists cross cultural and national boundaries, synthesising Western visual language with forms, techniques and philosophies from Asia, the Subcontinent and the Middle East. More than twenty years later, we continue to champion artists, particularly women and those from underrepresented cultures, whose work exemplifies our interconnectedness.

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Opening in 2025
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London 27 Pall Mall
Sundaram Tagore Gallery
27 Pall Mall, London, United Kingdom
+44 (0)20 8057 0789
http://www.sundaramtagore.com
Opening hours
Opening in 2025
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