Kohei Nawa interweaves PixCell and Prism series in new LA exhibition
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Kohei Nawa interweaves PixCell and Prism series in new LA exhibition
Kohei Nawa, PixCell-Elk#3, 2026 © Kohei Nawa.



LOS ANGELES, CA.- Pace presents an exhibition by Kohei Nawa at its Los Angeles gallery from April 11 to June 6. Marking the Japanese multidisciplinary artist’s first solo show in Los Angeles, this presentation brings together 20 new works from two of his iconic sculptural series—PixCell and Prism—creating a cohesive environment in which his sculptures engage directly with the architecture of the gallery’s main exhibition space.

Drawing out the unique properties of various traditional and unconventional materials in his paintings, sculptures, and installations, Nawa explores nuanced relationships between physical and virtual spaces, synthetic and natural forces, and the individual and the collective. Intrinsic to his practice is a rigorous engagement with technologies that traverse eras and cultures, particularly information technologies. Visual distortions and transformations cut across his artworks, encouraging viewers to consider the ways that digital technologies impact their relationship to and experience of the physical world.

Nawa has also expanded his practice into the fields of architecture and performance—he is currently presenting Mirage and Planet [wanderer], performance works created in collaboration with choreographer Damien Jalet, in select European and Asian cities.

Titled Photon Camp, the artist’s exhibition at Pace Los Angeles foregrounds his expansive investigations of perceptual and sensory phenomena and reflects new directions in his recent work. For Nawa, an artwork is not a static entity fixed by a single interpretation. Rather, it is a phenomenological event that occurs when swarms of photons momentarily and miraculously come together. His first installation comprising both his PixCell and Prism series—which he has developed continuously over the course of his career—explores tensions between the natural and the artificial, the real and the fictional, and the sacred and the profane.

Memories of disaster—including the 1995 Great Hanshin-Awaji Earthquake and the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake—have also profoundly shaped Nawa’s worldview and artistic practice as well as his vision for Photon Camp. Nawa understands the works in his installation at Pace as “drifting objects.” Japan has welcomed drifting objects carried on the sea throughout its history, forging its culture through processes of mixture and hybridization. Within the global circulation of matter, drifting objects wander, linger, and arrive in unintended places. For Nawa, they symbolize the cyclical nature of civilization on a planetary scale. Notions of fluctuation and impermanence cut across his work, inviting meditations on cycles of destruction and regeneration.

The artist’s new PixCell and Prism works reflect his enduring engagement with the history of Surrealism. Incorporating taxidermized animals and found objects he has collected from different places and during various periods of his life, these sculptures juxtapose new technologies and modes of making with analogue materials. In his celebrated PixCell works, which he began producing 25 years ago, Nawa covers the surfaces of objects with transparent spheres, or cells, to distort viewers’ perceptions of the forms beneath. With his Prism works, he houses objects inside transparent boxes, which fragment and transform the appearance of their contents depending on the viewer’s position. Works in both series pose questions about the nature of reality through visuo-tactile experience.

A large-scale, freestanding sculpture titled PixCell-Elk#3, which takes a taxidermized elk as its motif, is the centerpiece of Nawa’s presentation at the gallery. Other works surround the elk—a symbol of the majesty of the natural world—to create a cohesive environment, with some displayed atop pedestals and others situated on the floor or mounted on walls. Casting its gaze beyond the viewer, into the void, the elk presides over the artist’s installation, which unfolds through space along the elk’s axis. Together, these sculptures form a holistic, dynamic installation that pushes the boundary between artifice and nature.










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