Click here to read more Picture This Post Western Exhibitions stories.
WHEN:
September 6 to October 26, 2024
WHERE:
Western Exhibitions
1709 W Chicago Ave
Chicago, IL 60622
TICKETS:
For more information and tickets visit the Western Exhibitions website.
A spokesperson describes the event as follows:
“...second solo show with Aya Nakamura, featuring colored pencil drawings on handmade paper that revolve around the variability of vision, informed by her daily mediation practice, and reimagining and approximating inner visions and dreams…
...Aya Nakamura is intrigued by the ways in which vision changes based on external conditions (too much or too little light), on how the eye sees (with myopia, hyperopia, AMD, glasses refracting light in bands of yellow and blue, also known as chromatic aberration), and on internal states (of turmoil, peace, boredom). She has observed that while her brain interprets visual data, it also generates its own sights and insights, which is especially apparent at night in the scenes that unfold when asleep or half awake. At times her vision feels saturated, brought to a happy hypnosis by a dense crop of plants, while at other times it feels empty, as though the landscape has retreated to an impossibly far distance. Sound, on the other hand, focuses her vision suddenly and violently. Through meditation, Nakamura becomes aware of a vision that is charged with worldly references and tries to separate the associations from the visual information. It is a daily practice that is dotted with moments of inattention and unwelcome forms edging into her consciousness.
Her drawings aren’t necessarily 1:1 representations of these experiences—they are abstractions that reimagine and approximate them in roundabout ways. Viewers are greeted with the drawing Brick, an apt starting point as it refers to the brick wall across from Nakamura’s apartment that faces her as she begins a sit. Bio-patterns emerge as she lowers her eyelids, perhaps inspiring the drawing Hot Visions, a riot of intertwining red and white lines that reverberate atop an intense green field. While those two drawings have unique shapes, Warming is on a square sheet and is about coming together as a community, remembering loved ones, alive and dead, maintaining hope, all the warming effects bought about by the practice. Another shaped piece, Sit, was inspired by watching waves wash ashore in Karatsu Bay. After making the piece, she turned the paper upright to reference the sitting body performing a successful sit—the body grounded, with thoughts and sensations washing in and out with the breath. As much as Nakamura’s drawings are beautiful abstractions, they are also visceral in their making and their imagery, imbued with a corporeal life source…”