Capsule Shanghai
Skip to main content
  • Menu
  • Home
  • Artists
  • Exhibitions
  • VIEWING ROOMS
  • Art Fairs
  • News
  • Press
  • Videos
  • Contact
  • About
  • EN
  • 中文
Menu
  • EN
  • 中文

Ryosuke Kumakura: Habituation

Past exhibition
22 July - 9 September 2023
  • Overview
  • Works
  • Installation Views
  • Press release
Ryosuke Kumakura: Habituation
View works
Share
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Email
Capsule Shanghai is pleased to present “Habituation”, the first solo exhibition of Ryosuke Kumakura (b. 1981, Niigata, Japan) in China, showcasing recent works realized between 2019 and 2023. The show will be on view at Capsule Shanghai from July 22 to September 9, 2023. 
 
Ryosuke Kumakura’s interest lies in the relationship between artistic practise and mundane activities. Inspired by everyday objects, his still-lives break the boundary between painting and daily experience. Reimagining the physicality of the canvas, he highlights its texture and sculptural quality, and captures the natural state of common objects, such as socks and towels, in a two-dimensional space.
 
Frequently on the move over the past few years, the artist tangles with the concept of habituation, and contemplates how we adapt to new environments and the consequent emotional impact. Just as setting up his studio and making works award the artist a familiarity that eases the transition into a strange surrounding, custom and routine are cornerstones in the construction of a physical and emotional sanctuary. Each experience of moving house prompts Kumakura to re-evaluate his habits and the marks they make, and reflect on their underlying psychological drive. In the juggle of old customs and new stimuli, decisions are made to reinforce or abandon existing ways of being in the hope of a material and emotional renewal of the self. 
 
By exposing the meticulously treated stretchers, Kumakura has blurred the boundary between the works and the living / exhibition spaces. This is most evident in the “Night Window” series. Charcoal drawings of nocturnal scenes are contained in window-like wooden frames and partially covered by double-pane glass, obscured by the reflection of the glazing. Looking at the works is vividly reminiscent of gazing through a half-open window at the hazy silhouette of trees under the moonlight. The artist fabricated the charcoal by burning winter branches from his courtyard. The use of domestically sourced materials and the control on the physical makeup of the work fortify the tie between the work and daily life. The series was first started when the artist moved from New York to New Hampshire. Consequently, the night outside his window changed from city lights to shadows of the woods. Through his defy visual play with the dark charcoal drawing and the reflection of the glass, a viewing difficulty otherwise regarded as a curatorial flaw is transformed into an emotional tension of desolation and eeriness; in the attempt of seeing the darkness of the unknown, one cannot help but catch their own reflection. 
 
The "Socks" and "Towel" series, while deceiving the viewer with their illusory texture of fabrics, embody Kumakura's observation of and affection for his family members. The act of taking off socks signifies a peculiarly intimate state of mind that differs from the casualness of taking off a coat or the privacy of removing undergarments. It represents a moment of ease and security. Compared to his other works, these paintings are larger in size due to the exposed, narrow wooden stretchers, which take the shape of long mirrors. While the half-filled emptiness within the stretchers reflects the absence of a person in the “mirror”, the canvas stacked and creased at the bottom resembles socks strewn on the floor, which still retain the wrinkles from being worn, implying human traces. The "Towel" series began when the artist started living with his partner and learning the other person’s idiosyncrasies. His partner's habit of folding towels neatly on the rack inspired him to ponder over the similarities between towels and canvases, not only in terms of their texture, but also their potential as mediums of emotions. From the series, the paintings of towels with stripes and floral patterns stand out from the remaining monochromatic "towels" in this exhibition; the towels depicted in these two works were left by the artist's mother at his home. The works convey the artist’s appreciation of and affection towards his loved ones for these aesthetic choices on domestic trivia, considered or subconscious, are telling of the choice maker’s character. 
 
Kumakura’s acute perception of details extends from his personal life to his studio practise. Once in the process of stretching a canvas, he noticed that the randomly folded fabric coincidentally resembled a cat's ear, which inspired the iconic form of the “Cat” and “Fur” series of paintings. Taking as a starting point the pre-existing structure of the painted material, he started to create portraits of cats, a creature he deems reliable but not necessarily friendly, speaking from his experience of growing up with the animal: “A person’s relationship with their cat is like a painter’s relationship with painting.” In the exhibition, two cats on the canvas sit on a pile of used towels by the window, gazing back in profound silence. The "Fur" series directs the viewer’s eyes to the surface of the canvas, as Kumakura explores the expressive potential of the material by recreating cat fur and patterns through the texture of the fabric and the brush strokes.
 
In the drawing installation Practice (2023), the artist's intention was to rebuild his relationship with certain everyday objects. "I have always had a complicated relationship with plastic pens," says Kumakura when describing the dilemma of the plasticpen as an essential but underappreciated object. When making the work, he has accomplished something that he (and many of us) had never done before - using up the ink of an entire ballpoint pen. Through repetitively drawing the sign of a star on a piece of paper, the ink transforms into a sky of dark constellations. Although a pentagram is far from a realistic representation of the luminous celestial bodies, its meaning is a universal consensus. This familiar convention becomes strange and challenging as a result of repetition. The draping of the paper at the corners lures the viewer to discover upon closer inspection that against the starry sky, translucent plastic pushpins scatter on the paper in the shape of the Cancer constellation. Pens and pushpins, common and overlooked, reincarnate into twinkling stars high above. The disassembled body, cap, and exhausted refill of the pen laying below the drawing sparkle with a crystalline shimmer, commemorating the infinite possibility of ordinary beings under contemplation and reconstruction.
 
All artworks are self-portraits. Ryosuke Kumakura's paintings mirror the quality of introspection and sensitivity in his nature while extending an invitation to the viewer to reexperience his moments of solitude, tenderness and humor in a time of change. Encapsulating the many thoughts and emotions that gave birth to the works on view, the word “habituation”, as the artist reflects, conjures a river of images in his mind:
 
Birds scared of a scarecrow accustomed to the situation, so they can fly around;
Foster care children going through so many changes to become a new family member;
A husband picking up his favorite picture to make a new house as a “home”;
Big waves slowly calming down, then becoming a tranquil ocean;
A street cat appears in your house every day.
Share
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Email
Back to exhibitions

CAPSULE 胶囊 

1st Floor, Building 16, Anfu Lu 275 Nong, Xuhui District, Shanghai, China – 200031 

Tuesday to Saturday, 10am - 6pm
Sunday, Monday and national holidays closed
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
 

PH 座机 : +86 021 64170700

EMAIL 邮箱: info@capsuleshanghai.com

 

中国上海徐汇区安福路 275 弄 16 号 1 楼- 200031 

周二至周六,10:00 - 18:00

周日、周一及法定假日关闭
仅限预约观展

   

Facebook, opens in a new tab.
Twitter, opens in a new tab.
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Send an email
Vimeo, opens in a new tab.
Privacy Policy
Manage cookies
Copyright © 2025 Capsule
Site by Artlogic

This website uses cookies
This site uses cookies to help make it more useful to you. Please contact us to find out more about our Cookie Policy.

Manage cookies
Accept

Cookie preferences

Check the boxes for the cookie categories you allow our site to use

Cookie options
Required for the website to function and cannot be disabled.
Improve your experience on the website by storing choices you make about how it should function.
Allow us to collect anonymous usage data in order to improve the experience on our website.
Allow us to identify our visitors so that we can offer personalised, targeted marketing.
Save preferences
Previous
Next
Close