Photo: Mengqi Bao. Courtesy of the artist and Perrotin.
A Leisurely Stroll With the Horse
solo show
March 11 - May 24, 2025
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Shanghai

3/F, 27 Huqiu Road, Huangpu District

Perrotin Shanghai is pleased to announce the solo exhibition of the Japanese artist Shintaro Miyake, A Leisurely Stroll With the Horse, marking his first collaboration with the gallery.

Photo: Mengqi Bao. Courtesy of the artist and Perrotin.
Photo: Mengqi Bao. Courtesy of the artist and Perrotin.
Photo: Mengqi Bao. Courtesy of the artist and Perrotin.
Photo: Mengqi Bao. Courtesy of the artist and Perrotin.

Born in 1970, Shintaro Miyake’s arrival coincided with a turning point in Japan’s history—a moment when the fervor of political movements had started to wane. As the Osaka Expo’70 marked the dawning of rapid economic growth and rampant consumerism, it also paved the way for a new wave of visual culture, where manga, anime, and gaming began to rise and reshape the fabric of Japanese society. Like many of his generation, Miyake grew up immersed in this vibrant visual culture. His works, featuring characters with oversized oval heads, slender limbs, and an innocent, manga-inspired style, immediately evoke the Otaku subculture, which has left a lasting imprint not only on Japan but across all of East Asia. Some might regard this as nothing more than an individualistic cultural phenomenon born within a particular subculture, where disillusioned youth, tired of societal politics, retreat into the world of fiction, severing the connection between virtual imagery and real life to create a spiritual utopia. But in a world wholly alienated by consumerism, all is estranged. The city, swollen by economic prosperity, becomes a sprawling, untamable beast. People from all walks of life are swept up in a relentless race for survival and status. In this indifferent, profit-driven expanse, true human connection dissolves into mere abstraction. Yet Miyake’s whimsical, endearing visual language offers a soothing antidote to societal disconnection, providing a gentle respite in an otherwise indifferent world.


Miyake is not an artist who simply absorbs subcultural influences, nor is he a passive observer. His sustained artistic practice is an ongoing process of shaping his own reality, where creation becomes an active means of engagement. Through this, his visual language takes form— one that not only depicts reality but also reconstructs it.

In 1992, Miyake enrolled in the Printmaking program at Tama Art University, where he studied copperplate printing. The process involved chemical treatments, large-scale machinery, and a precise sequence of steps, all of which felt restrictive to his creative approach. Gravitating toward greater immediacy and fluidity, he eventually abandoned the medium. For Miyake, artistic practice has always been inseparable from the pursuit of freedom.


Before studying printmaking, Miyake trained in oil painting, yet neither medium offered the sense of freedom he sought. During his university years, he found himself creatively adrift. It was during this period of uncertainty that he came across a book on folk art—an encounter that left a profound impact. For the first time, he realized that art could exist beyond technical and formal constraints. “Even now, that revelation remains the foundation of my practice, allowing me to create with complete freedom.”

Art serves, in part, as a way for artists to articulate their complex, inseparable bond with the world. At the heart of this process lies the artist’s own lived experience—an inexhaustible source of inspiration. Miyake is no exception. His solo exhibition at Perrotin Shanghai incorporates a rich array of Chinese mythological themes, a choice informed by his personal encounters with Chinese culture, while his works retain a distinctly manga-inspired aesthetic.

Photo: Mengqi Bao. Courtesy of the artist and Perrotin.
Photo: Mengqi Bao. Courtesy of the artist and Perrotin.
Photo: Mengqi Bao. Courtesy of the artist and Perrotin.
Photo: Mengqi Bao. Courtesy of the artist and Perrotin.

My work could be described as “kawaii,” but within that kawaii aesthetic lurks something unsettling, even eerie.



— Shintaro Miyake

Miyake’s fascination with Chinese culture began early. In high school, he immersed himself in Sangokushi, Mitsuteru Yokoyama’s sweeping 60-volume manga epic. During university, manga once again became a gateway, this time leading him to Confucianism and Daoism. Later, captivated by the Fujian earthen buildings he had glimpsed on television, he longed to see them with his own eyes—a dream he finally realized ten years ago. More recently, after playing Black Myth: Wukong, he developed an interest in Journey to the West and went on to read the classic in full. Miyake’s engagement with Chinese culture has been varied and unstructured, yet it has become a rich foundation for his imagination to unfold.


Art seeks to uncover the treasures of the spiritual world hidden within our experiences. Without the spark of imagination, raw materials—be they reality, history, culture, or mythology—remain inert, unable to reveal their profound and layered meanings. What Miyake does is to cultivate an imaginative space between his personal experiences and these myths and traditions, allowing them to emerge in fresh and unexpected ways. In Miyake’s work, we can see how elements of Chinese myths and traditions start as faint sparks, gradually growing into flames that fuse with his experiences, emotions, and thoughts. It gives rise to a world that feels both fresh and familiar, at once unexpected and beautiful.

Although my inspiration comes from Chinese culture and mythology, as the creation progressed, I felt that the works themselves evolved, becoming more introspective.



— Shintaro Mikaye

In Miyake’s hands, various elements take on exaggerated forms, allowing each image to open a window into another imaginative space. As in ancient myths, nothing—be it human, animal, architecture, or space—remains fixed; every body, every appearance shifts, morphing in unexpected ways to convey a mix of humor, eccentricity, playfulness, and deep empathy. This world is not one of absolutes but of symbols, metaphors, and suggestions. Every image points both to a familiar experience and to a hidden world. These varying forms carry rich layers of meaning, evoking the complexities of ancient myth and tradition in a contemporary context. The gallery space these works inhabit carries a ritualistic quality, guiding us down a hidden path—an invitation to rediscover spirituality in a world increasingly marked by disconnection and distance.

Studio Views. Photo: Yichien Lee.

Stepping into Miyake’s artistic world is like venturing into a jungle where myth and adventure merge, where fantasy and danger collide. His manga-inspired figures, both whimsical and peculiar, tender and bizarre, draw us in, urging us to linger and feel the emotions they carry. Each image encourages us to absorb its nuances, to ponder what is unfamiliar or awe-inspiring, and to uncover the richness that lies hidden within. In this realm, we walk alongside Miyake, lost in the enchantment of this mysterious wilderness, delving into its secrets and marvels.

Shintaro Miyake created this work at the gallery on the opening day (March 11) .
Shintaro MIYAKE

Born in 1970
Lives and works in Tokyo, Japan


Shintaro Miyake completed his B.A. at Tama Art University in 1996, and currently lives and works in Tokyo, Japan. From drawing, painting, sculpture, to “cut-outs” of characters drawn on cardboard or wood, live drawings created while wearing originally-designed costumes, as well as performance, and video, Miyake freely incorporates and combines a wide variety of expressions to create a unique artistic world that is permeated by a rich sense of wit. The diverse and pleasantly humorous nature of his oeuvre has continued to fascinate and attract the attention of viewers internationally. Miyake has held solo exhibitions in numerous locations throughout the world, including Italy, Austria, Berlin, and Taiwan. His works are housed in the public collections of Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art (Norway), Kistefos Museet (Norway), Haus der Künstler in Gugging (Austria), The JAPIGOZZI Collection, Rubell Family Collection (USA), and the Takahashi Collection (Japan).



More about the artist
List of artworks
ENTRANCE
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