Visible Gravity: Keiji Uematsu Brings Back A Peripheral Spacial Awareness
From April 8th - May 6th, Simon Lee Gallery will be presenting a solo exhibition of new and historical work by Japanese conceptual artist Keiji Uematsu, his first ever in the United Kingdom.
Uematsu’s highly cohesive body of work spanning over 45 years makes invisible relationships between objects and the spaces they inhabit visible. The ideas of ‘de-familiarising’ space and focusing our attention on the natural forces of gravity, tension, and material attraction, whether through photography, drawing or sculptural installation, underlie his entire practice.
Uematsu graduated from the department of Fine Arts, Kobe University in 1969, at the very time when the new group of artists whose work later came to be associated with the name Mona-ha were rising to prominence. They proposed a radical conceptual practice which moved away from traditional forms of representation toward an engagement with materials, objects and their properties and it was in this creative context that Uematsu developed his artistic language. In 1975 he moved from his native Japan to Dusseldorf. The following year he was the first Japanese artist ever to show at Moderna Museet, Stockholm, and he quickly developed concurrent exhibiting activities in Europe and Japan. His move came not only in the context of a rapidly developing conceptual art movement in Japan, but also of intense exchange between artists in Europe, North American and Asia.
The artistic context in Dusseldorf proved fertile ground for Uematsu to develop his conceptual photographic practice and it was from within this context and in relation to peers such as Bernd and Hilla Becher (Bernd was already teaching at the Kunstakademie) that he was encouraged to submit a proposal for the 1977 edition of Documenta. Documenta 6 project drawing shows two timber beams held in tension across the width of a room, their alignment offset, the means of their lateral support evident. In this single drawing, the core of Uematsu’s project is apparent. It is, as he has said, ‘to create a work in which the lack of a single element will cause the entire structure, the invisible existences of things and their relationships, to collapse like a cosmos.’
A series of seven photographs Degree-light documents a performance Uematsu made for slide projecting in 1978 at the Performance Art Festival at Beursschouwburg (Brussels). The performance consisted of the artist swinging a light bulb on its cord to describe a circle with his body framed at the centre. Using light to effectively draw in space, Uematsu creates an ephemeral form that appears solid for one brief moment, with the artist and object ‘becoming’ together. The circle, as a symbol of totality, wholeness, the self, the infinite was elegantly ruptured during the live performance, but here captured whole, photographically and exhibited for the first time.
These remarkable historical works, alongside new sculptures and large-scale drawings, all reflect Uematsu’s ongoing enquiry into making visible invisible forces whilst also making apparent the influence he has had on younger generations of artists internationally.