4 November - 23 December 2015
New York, 69th Street
Beginning 4 November 2015, Hauser & Wirth will present the gallery’s first New York exhibition devoted to internationally-admired Osaka-born, Paris-based artist Takesada Matsutani. Over a five-decade career that began with his participation in the Gutai Art Association and evolved to express the tangled complexities of a life lived between France and Japan, Matsutani has developed a unique visual language of form and materials. His work plays with notions of time and the movement of our bodies through it. Engaging themes of the eternal and the infinite, and echoing the endless cycles of life and death, Matsutani merges material, hue, and movement to arrive at an art about the present moment and the reverberating forces and unceasing currents from which life itself flows. Highlighting the artist’s practice in Paris at the beginning of the 1970s, ‘Takesada Matsutani’ at Hauser & Wirth will present never before seen paintings and sculptures from the artist’s early career, as well as a selection of drawings, and new abstractions in his signature medium of graphite and vinyl glue. Organized with Olivier Renaud-Clément, the exhibition will remain on view at the gallery’s East 69th Street location through 23 December 2015. Takesada Matsutani was a recognized member of Japan’s avant-garde Gutai Art Association (1954 – 1972) when he set forth to France in 1966 on a journey that would transform his career. Developing an aesthetic in his formative years through radical experimentations with vinyl glue, the young artist impregnated the surface of his canvases with bulbous elements, using his own breath to create swollen and ruptured forms evocative of flesh and wounds. For his ability to elicit the sensual tactility of his materials and create viscerally profound new forms, Matsutani was awarded first prize at the First Mainichi Art Competition and received a six-month scholarship from the French government to study abroad. While the teachings and ethos of Gutai have exerted an enduring influence upon the artist, nearly 50 years later Matsutani still calls Paris his home. Entering the exhibition, visitors will encounter Matsutani’s bold, colorful paintings from the early 1970s, a radical body of work that reveals the evolution of his earlier formative notions. Soon after moving to Paris and beginning work at renowned engraver Stanley William Hayter’s Atelier 17, Matsutani devoted himself to the techniques of etching, printmaking, and silkscreen. Hayter’s workshop was a center for creative exchange and collaboration, both in Paris and New York, and exerted profound influence upon such artists as Louise Bourgeois, Salvador DalÍ, Max Ernst, Joan Miró and Joan Mitchell. Through the prowess of Atelier 17, American Abstraction and the New York School collided and mingled with the European avant garde – for Matsutani, Atelier 17 introduced new forms of artistic experimentation. Influenced by the theories and history of ‘the image’ in Western culture, and especially by American Minimalism and the Hard-edge paintings of Ellsworth Kelly, he began to conceive new compositions, re-arranging and testing the limits of pictorial space. Transforming the same organic and biomorphic forms he first developed in glue, ‘Red-Sun-P’ (1972) and ‘Object P.P.’ (1973) render the artist’s pooling, curvaceous forms as flat geometric planes of color on canvas. Matsutani set up his own studio in the heart of the Bastille, historically Paris’s furniture manufacturing and cabinet-makers’ district. Here, he gathered discarded materials from local workshops, scavenging wooden spindles, planks, rope, cotton bedding, and wool stuffing, which he transformed into sculpture. Creating small peculiar objects that evoked notions of the erotic or surreal, Matsutani initiated investigations between soft and hard material forms. ‘Object Box’ (1976) employs the viscosity of glue to create a sensually protruding bulge from the wooden box in which it is contained. Similarly, ‘Object-P’ (1975) swallows a wooden rod in its bloated white form. On the introduction of white paint and gradual elimination of color from his visual vocabulary, Matsutani has remarked, ‘I thought that the shapes made by the vinyl adhesive were interesting enough that it was probably better not to add much color. It was a dialogue between something hard and something soft. The glue is soft but it has the power to absorb hard objects, and in this way a balance is achieved. I thought that glue, with its capacity to swell and maintain a curved line, made organic shapes possible.’ Beginning around 1977, Matsutani began to exclusively use black graphite in an expansive manner, covering the white ground of a textured canvas or monumental sheet of paper with repetitive, successive strokes. Through the building of layers, each mark and charcoal smudge captures the accumulation of energy and tension in a powerful manifestation of material and time. On the second floor of the gallery, two mural-sized drawings reflect Matsutani’s ritualized gestures. ‘Stream, Hauser & Wirth, London’ (1984 – 2015) is one of Matsutani’s largest works – it is a ten-meter sheet, which the artist has covered in a blanket of ash, leaving just one thin white line coursing through its middle. The paper possesses a grated, abrasive texture obtained by first scratching the entirety of the blank sheet’s surface with a nail. To complete this drawing Matsutani splashed turpentine over the edges of the densely saturated surface. Via a technique that dissolves his graphite in a tremendous surge, Matsutani’s Stream series (1977 – present) exudes a forceful sense of existence, transformation, and becoming. These majestic works are complemented by a presentation of intimately scaled drawings from the mid-1970s. Here Matsutani employed graphite, household paint and turpentine on paper to create vivid gestural works reminiscent of his artistic beginnings with the Gutai in Japan. On the gallery’s third floor, the alchemy of black or white gives life to the mature aesthetic of Matsutani’s recent creations. In marked contrast to the rawness of his early paintings, these works reveal the artist carefully controlling his medium (glue) as it moves across the canvas, making or deflating pockets of air and creating new ridges, wrinkles, and crevices as the adhesive hardens. In some canvases Matsutani has chosen to cover the surface of each oblong form with methodical, almost meditative metallic graphite lines; other works are bathed in a luminous coat of milky white paint. The opposing palettes pulsate with rhythmic motion, creating shapes that evoke the unbridled energy of a crashing wave or the germination of a seed and suggesting the conundrum of time, another ‘medium’ palpably felt in Matsutani’s art. ‘I feel something universal in the beauty of this black,’ he has said of these works with their hints of the endless life cycle in their texture, light, and depth. Performance On 9 November 2015, Takesada Matsutani will enact ‘Stream in New York’, performing one final gesture in Sumi ink to complete a major five-meter canvas on view in the exhibition. Following this action, the gallery will host a panel discussion between the artist; Olivier Renaud-Clément, co-organizer of the exhibition; and Reiko Tomii, critic, scholar, and founder of PoNJA-GenKON.
Object-P. 1
1975
Trees
1975
Germination-2014
2014
Nagare
1972
Red-Sun-P
1972
Object-P
1975
A Face-C
1971
Fly
1972
Untitled
1973
Untitled
1973
Untitled
1973
Object P. P.
1973
Double decilitre
1973
Object-860
1973
Suggestion-F
1974
Untitled
1975
Fertility No. V
1975
Object-02
1975
Object Box
1975
Untitled
1976
Object Box
1976
Untitled
1976
Object-113
1977
From the early 1960s until the 1970s Matsutani was a key member of the ‘second generation’ of the influential post war Japanese art collective, the Gutai Art Association. Over five decades Matsutani has developed a unique visual language of form and materials. As part of the Gutai group, Matsutani experimented with vinyl glue, using fans and his own breath to manipulate the substance, creating bulbous and sensuous forms reminiscent of human curves and features.
In 1966, Matsutani received a grant from the French government after winning first prize in the 1st Mainichi Art Competition and subsequently moved to Paris where he began working at Stanley William Hayter's renowned printmaking studio, Atelier 17. During the four years he worked at the studio, he learnt French, married and established his base in Paris. Working alongside Hayter opened Matsutani up to a new form of artistic experimentation and offered him a newfound confidence. Matsutani began to rethink his practice and a new elemental aesthetic language began to emerge that was both controlled and organic.
After the Gutai group disbanded in 1972, Matsutani eased into a radical yet consistent new body of work, informed by his experience at Atelier 17. Faithful to his Gutai roots, he strove to identify and convey the essential character of vinyl glue with graphite, that were to become his signature materials. Matsutani began creating vast expanses of metallic black graphite on mural-size sheets of paper built up with painstaking individual strokes. This ritualized manner presents a time-based record of his gestures, while reminiscent of his artistic beginnings in Japan, it has been translated into an artistic language that is uniquely his own.
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