Photo: Mengqi Bao. ©MADSAKI/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Courtesy Perrotin.
The Night Is Long That Never Finds The Day
solo show
23 septembre - 22 octobre 2022
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SHANGHAI

3/F, 27 HUQIU ROAD, HUANGPU DISTRICT

Perrotin Shanghai is delighted to present MADSAKI’s solo exhibition, The Night Is Long That Never Finds The Day, the artist’s first solo presentation in mainland China, with a series of landscape paintings to mark a thematic shift in his painting practice.

Photo: Mengqi Bao. ©MADSAKI/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Courtesy Perrotin.
Photo: Mengqi Bao. ©MADSAKI/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Courtesy Perrotin.
Photo: Mengqi Bao. ©MADSAKI/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Courtesy Perrotin.
Photo: Mengqi Bao. ©MADSAKI/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Courtesy Perrotin.
Photo: Mengqi Bao. ©MADSAKI/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Courtesy Perrotin.
Photo: Mengqi Bao. ©MADSAKI/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Courtesy Perrotin.

Having accrued much success and accolades from a painting practice that undermines the dichotomy of high art and low art, MADSAKI's visual resources range from the classics throughout art history to newspaper images and pop culture icons while he "upgraded" spray paint as a fine art medium. MADSAKI was on the outlook for a new direction and perspective in his works. The title of exhibition, taken from a passage in Shakespeare’s seminal tragedy, MacBeth, conveys MADSAKI’s visual translation of the current global situation from his viewpoint.

As the recent global pandemic ravaging continuously throughout the world, keeping people socially distanced and mentally isolated, MADSAKI’s nagging desire to escape physically and psychologically culminated over time. Before spring arrived this year, when tree branches were still barren and covered in snow, the artist went on a nocturnal excursion with his wife and daughter to a deserted beach in the Noto Area of Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan, during their visit to his wife’s hometown. Captivated by the sceneries along a dirt road behind the beach, desolate and rarely frequented even by the locals, he stopped along the way and took many photographs, lit by the moon above and the headlights of his car. Although he had gone back to the very same place multiple times after that, the experience of that particular night locked in the artist’s mind, impelling him to translate it onto canvas.

Photo: Mengqi Bao. ©MADSAKI/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Courtesy Perrotin.

MADSAKI had always wanted to paint nature, but the questions have been where and how. A self-proclaimed "half city-boy, half nature-lover" began to toil with landscape painting on his visits to the Big Island of Hawaii earlier this year, where his uncle resides. As with all of his previous paintings that come from personal stories and experiences, the recent works depicting nature, on the one hand, pay homage to a place, to his wife’s past, and offer context to her becoming of age for him to relate to; on the other, became a personal journey of self-discovery, healing, and introspection.

©2022 MADSAKI/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved.

Coincidentally, as MADSAKI worked on the latest landscapes in April this year, he re-read the hallucinatory prose poetry, A Season in Hell by the precocious French poet Arthur Rimbaud, whose preoccupation with deranged senses, intoxicating circumstances, or even disorienting experiences, not only captivated the artist, but its lyrical imagery, its destruction of poetic forms resonated with MADSAKI's approach to painting. Similar to Rimbaud's cathartic epic that signed off his career in poetry, the appeal in MADSAKI's landscape paintings is the way in which the artist extracts authentic personal experiences that draw on suffering and despair as much as on hope and aspiration.

It's a genre completely new to me. It makes me feel completely naked. I am comfortable and uncomfortable at the same time.



— MADSAKI
©2022 MADSAKI/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved.

The works on view are unanimously untitled, extending a similar sense of ambivalence found in his previous figurative paintings, where the figures typically wore a smiley face with tears running down their cheeks. For the latest works, MADSAKI adopted a different set of painting techniques using the spray can. He rendered nuanced color schemes with multiple layers over solid forms, while preserving the signature drips on the surface that offers a complex psyche rather than delivering a poignant message. Absent of any human trace in these imageries, the light in the foreground often illuminates the picture to suggest a defiant, if not optimistic, attitude from the viewpoint of the painter/spectator, while the background constantly receding into a twilight zone is nevertheless lit despite of a general doom and gloom atmosphere.

Famously known for his fast executions, MADSAKI had previously completed a painting within hours from start to finish. These landscapes, however, have taken much longer, from weeks to even months. The length of time taking the artist to complete each painting not only reflects a meditative process of digging deep into one’s emotional reservoir, but also to resonate with the title of the exhibition and the consistent nocturnal theme of this series.


Although MADSAKI depicts such a journey through an infinite night that the light of day is nowhere in sight, the artist’s command of the painting medium, his use of color that illuminate the pictures rings true with Albert Camus' phrase scribbled on a piece of a paper cardboard in his studio, "The only way to deal with an unfree world is to become so absolutely free that your very existence is an act of rebellion."


Text by Fiona He


©2022 MADSAKI/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
MADSAKI

Né à Osaka, Japon
Habite et travaille à Tokyo, Japon


A graduate of New York City’s Parsons School of Design (BFA, 1996), MADSAKI was raised in New Jersey, USA – experiences between two cultures that formed his aesthetics and personality. While much of MADSAKI’s work centers on his interest in art history and critiquing mass culture with references to slang, movies and manga characters, the artist has recently been exploring more personal, intimate topics. To express this visually, MADSAKI developed a signature style using spray paint as a fine art medium, stemming from the fact that he has never participated in illegal graffiti on the streets. The artist is particularly known for his Wannabe series, which at first glance humorously targets old masters, yet their deeper meaning is a reoccurring theme that can be found throughout MADSAKI’s artistic practice - an attempt to use laughter and humor as both distraction and therapy for his internal turmoil.



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