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Kawara (Tiled Roof) Painting

Hideyuki Sobue

United Kingdom

Painting, Acrylic on Canvas

Size: 12 W x 29.9 H x 2.4 D in

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About The Artwork

As a Japanese artist living in the UK, I feel a constant longing, passion and love for all things Japanese. I think that Western art has always based itself on a meta-narrative, and always tried to reinvent itself to move forward from the current meta-narrative, and as a result modern art as it has emerged in the West has become a highly theoretical practice. In comparison, traditional Japanese art has been created in a unique environment (even though it takes significant influence from China). Japan lived through 700 years of the rule of the sword, which included 200 or more years of complete closure to the outside world, during which it prospered. Perhaps this unique history explains why Japanese art has established its style, focusing on surface beauty as if picking up the essence of historical drama, landscapes and natural beauty as its motifs, by avoiding the speculative aspects of thought and philosophy. These things are indescribably beautiful, and also frail. Their beauty is closely linked to the Western philosophy and historical-artistic concept of "memento mori" (remember your mortality). This work "Kawara (Tiled Roof)" represents my interpretation of the unique aesthetic sense in Japanese culture. The heat of humid summer in Japan is intense. Every summer these roof tiles have endured its painful heat patiently, some for centuries. As simplifying its composition as possible by following the Japanese traditional painting style, I attempted to create a lyric visual narrative through which I explored my own Japanese identity. The work was produced with my original line hatching method by using a variety of visual sources to embody the above concept.

Details & Dimensions

Painting:Acrylic on Canvas

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:12 W x 29.9 H x 2.4 D in

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Hideyuki Sobue (b. 1965) lives and works in the Lake District, UK, yet grew up as an orphan in Aichi, Japan. Working with drawing and painting, two historic media that have served as a fundamental means of communication since prehistoric times, he explores the unbroken line in the relationship between art and humanity. Sobue uses an entirely original brush hatching technique employing Japanese sumi ink and acrylic. Created through a fusion of influences - the concept of Disegno in the Florentine school of the Renaissance, oriental artistic heritage and neurological studies - Sobue’s medium attempts to create a platform bridging east and west, and explore the interdisciplinary approach related to the human act of seeing. Sobue has exhibited extensively throughout the UK and Japan. Notable exhibitions include “A Letter to the Earth from Beatrix” commissioned by the National Trust and supported by Arts Council England (Allan Bank, Grasmere); "Wordsworth, Rawnsley and Lake District", celebrating the 250th anniversary of William Wordsworth’s birth and the centenary of Hardwicke Rawnsley’s death supported by Arts Council England (Rydal Mount & Gardens, Ambleside); "Conversation with Ruskin", celebrating the bicentenary of John Ruskin's birth, supported by Arts Council England (the Blue Gallery, Brantwood, Coniston/ The Ruskin Museum, Library and Research Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster); "Wordsworth and Basho: Walking Poets" (Itami City Museum Kakimori Bunko, Japan); "I Wandered...", commemorating the 200th anniversary of the final publication of William Wordsworth's poem "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" (Rydal Mount & Gardens, Ambleside); "The Way I See" supported by Arts Council England (Japan House Gallery, the Daiwa Anglo-Japanese Foundation, London); the Royal Scottish Academy Open (RSA Lower Gallery, Edinburgh); the Ruth Borchard Self-Portrait Prize (Kings Place, London); Royal Birmingham Society of Artists Open (RBSA Gallery); National Open Art (Minerva Theatre, Chichester). Among other public collections, his work is housed at Rydal Mount & Gardens - a historic house with gardens designed by William Wordsworth. Sobue’s works are currently held in public & private collections in Japan, China, UK, Netherlands, Australia, Canada and USA.

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