Press Release
Taka Ishii Gallery Tokyo is pleased to present a solo exhibition of works by Maria Taniguchi from April 21 to May 20. The exhibition marks Taniguchi’s first solo presentation in Japan, and will feature new paintings and sculptures. An exhibition catalog will be published in May.

Taniguchi’s works encompass painting, sculpture, video and installation. Her practices investigate space and time along with social and historical contexts. Her series of Untitled brick paintings is an ongoing series that had been initiated in 2008. Each painting consists of seemingly countless rectangular cells, each one outlined by hand with white graphite and filled with gray and black tones. The painstaking process creates a subtle yet complex pattern on the surface. These paintings develop in various extents, most of them reaching meters in size. The constructive structure embodies architectural elements, resulting in the paintings themselves manifesting as monumental existences within the space. Along with a large brick painting, Taniguchi will present 12 new paintings from the same series, albeit much more compact in scale.

These days, artists are seemingly attracted to the idea of ‘compression.’ This concept is not only limited to the compression of tangibles such as scientists who recently succeeded in transforming hydrogen into metal, but also the compression of intangibles such as data or time. Our contemporary society heavily relies on information technology that is now based on data storage devices that consist of an innumerable accumulation of the binary system, a system that soon will be a thing of the past as we approach mass-scale quantum computing. While the paintings’ simplicity in form could possibly be thought of as something related to minimalism, the paintings also serve to embody a device for storage in the technological sense of the term, and subsequently represent a historical meaning of human development.

Taniguchi will also show a group of new sculptures made from hardwood called Java Plum native to India and Southeast Asia. These large and architectural sized sculptures depict the letters ‘I’ and ‘O’, an enigmatic reference to a form of electronic interfacing (input and output). The artist has referred to her brick paintings as the fundamental root of her larger artistic practice, while the other artworks are reflection, or refractions of it. The new sculptures are no exception, representing a search for possibilities by coalescing the moment of contact (input / output) and the seeming anachronism of woodcraft.

Maria Taniguchi was born in Dumaguete City, the Philippines in 1981. She won the Hugo Boss Asia Art Award in 2015 and was LUX Associate Artists in 2009. Recent exhibitions include History of a vanishing present: A prologue, The Mistake Room, Los Angeles (2016); Afterwork, Para Site, Hong Kong (2016); Global: New Sensorium, ZKM Centre for Art and Media, Karlsruhe, Germany (2016); The Vexed Contemporary, Museum of Contemporary Art and Design, Manila (2015); and the 8th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art, QAGOMA, Brisbane (2015). Her works are held in a number of collections including the M+, Hong Kong; the Burger Collection, Hong Kong; Kadist Art Foundation, San Francisco/Paris; QAGOMA, Brisbane; and the K11 Art Foundation, Shanghai.


Installation Views

About the Artist

Maria Taniguchi is best known for her ongoing series of labour-intensive ‘brick paintings’ that are made of repetitive patterns of grey-black rectangles. For the paintings, which are all untitled and unnumbered, Taniguchi first draws out a grid, then fills one ‘brick’ at a time over a period of months on the floor of her Manila studio. While the works differ in size, the content—or lack thereof—always remains the same. Yet each painting is slightly unique in its distributions of minor gradations within the grid (some cells are near-black, while others appear as a washed-out grey)—a result of the differing amounts of water and pigment on Taniguchi’s brush at any given time. Revealing the hand of the artist and the associated connotations of labour in what at first appears to be mechanically produced, the differing densities are largely unplanned and heighten the illusion of textural space. At a glance, the paintings may resemble the grid structures of densely populated urban spaces or sombre memorial monuments. Taniguchi resists calling the paintings meditative however, and instead considers them more of a record of passing time and a means of regulating her own production.

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About the Gallery

Since its opening in 1994, Taka Ishii Gallery has continued to maintain and develop an exhibition program based on the goals of introducing international contemporary artists within Japan and acting as an international platform for emerging Japanese artists as well as contemporary masters.

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Address
Complex 665 3F
6-5-24 Roppongi
Minato-ku
Tokyo
Japan
Opening Hours
Taka Ishii Gallery Tokyo (complex665) will be closed from Wednesday April 1st until further notice, in response to the spreading of the coronavirus and in following with advisory guidelines issued by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government that requests people to refrain from going outdoors.
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Tokyo Complex 665 3F, 6-5-24 Roppongi
Taka Ishii Gallery
Complex 665 3F, 6-5-24 Roppongi, Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan

Opening hours
Taka Ishii Gallery Tokyo (complex665) will be closed from Wednesday April 1st until further notice, in response to the spreading of the coronavirus and in following with advisory guidelines issued by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government that requests people to refrain from going outdoors.
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