MUSÉE 29 – EVOLUTION

Evolution explores the concepts of progress, transformation, growth, and advancement in an age when images are taking a dramatic shift in the role they play in our lives.

Art Out: Toshio Shibata: Five Decades--A Retrospective

Art Out: Toshio Shibata: Five Decades--A Retrospective

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

Images by Jeremy Brugo

Laurence Miller Gallery presents TOSHIO SHIBATA: FIVE DECADES, the first American retrospective of this prolific Japanese artist, globally recognized for his photographs of infrastructure within the landscape. The show will encompass his student work in painting and printmaking from the early 1970's; his first forays into photography, exploring isolated structures at night; his pivot into highly abstract black and white photographs of the man-altered landscape; and his transition into color photography, which he continues to pursue to this day.  His early student work and recent landscape work have never before been exhibited in the U.S.

Shibata’s earliest influences are apparent in his student work, especially Jasper Johns’ Map paintings. His early photographs, taken at night in the mid-1980’s, echo the dispassionate point of view articulated by the New Topographic photographers exploring the American West.  By 1990, Shibata had found his true subject - the natural landscape, whose contours and boundaries were re-shaped by man.  Reflecting Japanese values, where man functions in harmony with nature, he used a strong sense of abstraction to capture the flow of water over a dam and the rhythms of concrete placed throughout hillsides to prevent erosion or collapse.  Commissioned by the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago in 1996, Shibata travelled across the U.S., and made some of his most powerful works at the Grand Coulee Dam in Douglas County, Washington.

Since 2006, his landscape work has been exclusively in color. It highlights his acute eye for abstraction, coupled with a palette of warm grays, soft greens and jolts of bright red.  And it offers great diversity – the serenity of a string of buoys on the reflective surface of the water; the force of tumultuous waterfall; the bold and dynamic engineering of bridges and dams; or the abstract rendering of elements of the landscape.  Perhaps the most iconic color image is Shibata’s 2007 photograph of a red bridge in Okawa Village,  Kochi Prefecture, Japan.

FIVE DECADES will be Laurence Miller Gallery’s ninth exhibition of Shibata’s photographs, including two-person shows with the painter Toeko Tatsuno and the photographer Yoko Ikeda.

Toshio Shibata was born in 1949 and his work has been exhibited internationally since 1971. He has had solo show at major museums including the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography; the Sprengel Museum in Hanover; the Centre National de Photographie in Paris; the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago; and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago. His work is represented in a variety of museum collections including Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; the Denver Art Museum: Sprengel Museum, Hannover; Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography; and Centre national de la Photographie, Paris.

Shibata was given a mid-career retrospective at the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography in 2008. In 2012, there was an expansive two-person show of his work, alongside the painter Toeko Tatsuno, at the National Arts Center in Tokyo. In 2013 the Peabody Essex Museum mounted a 16-month solo exhibtion of his work entitled Contructed Landscapes which featured 28 of his large scale prints. In 2018 his work was exhibited at the Denver Art Museum as part of their show New Territory—Landscape Photography Today.

Laurence Miller Gallery
June 12 - August 16 2019
Hours: Tues - Fri 10am ~ 6pm, Sat 11am ~ 6pm
521 W 26th St, New York, NY 10001

For more information please click here.

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

© Jeremy Brugo

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