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Friday, April 17, 2026 |
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| Robert Longo returns to Japan for first solo exhibition in 30 years |
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Robert Longo, Untitled (American Samurai), 2025. All images © 2026 Robert Longo / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
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TOKYO.- Pace presents Angels of the Maelstrom, an exhibition of new and recent charcoal drawings and sculptures by Robert Longo, at its Tokyo gallery from April 16 to June 17. In this presentation, which marks his first solo exhibition in Japan in three decades, Longo examines the cultural influences and exchanges between Japan and America and how the two cultures have shaped his work. His last solo exhibition in Japan was his 1995 retrospective at Tokyos Isetan Museum of Art, which traveled to Ashikaga City Museum and Osakas Kirin Plaza Art Space.
Over the past decade, the artist has increasingly turned his focus to images from the media, including coverage of the January 6 United States Capitol attack and the Black Lives Matter movement. Building up his hyper realistic, black-and-white charcoal drawings in layers with painstaking attention to light and shadow, he creates highly detailed works based on news photography as well as images of protests, civil unrest, and war on the Internet. Transforming his source images into epically scaled, emotionally resonant compositions, he reflects on power, violence, and national mythmaking while also proposing hope for the future.
While creating work for his exhibition at Pace Tokyo, Longo was inspired by Paul Klees watercolor monoprint Angelus Novus (1920), in which a curious angel is poised to either take flight or surrender. The piece was once owned by the German philosopher Walter Benjamin, who referred to the angel in his 1940 essay On the Concept of History as a witness to the future, an angel of history, whose face is turned toward the past [
] But a storm is blowing in from Paradise; it has got caught in his wings with such a violence that the angel can no longer close them. The storm irresistibly propels him into the future."
Longos investigations into allegorical mythologies and ancient archetypes that span cultures incorporate an array of loaded icons: a crashing wave, a submerged whale, a blooming peony. The centerpiece of his presentation across the gallerys two floors is Untitled (American Samurai), a drawing of the Japanese baseball player, the superstar of the Los Angeles Dodgers, Shohei Ohtani. For the artist, Ohtanis legacy as one of the best players of a quintessentially American pastime speaks powerfully to the collision of the two cultures.
Highlights also include new drawings of subjects from the natural worldincluding an arresting portrait of a tiger baring its teeth, an image of a cresting wave inspired by Hokusai, a misty mountain range, and blooming flowersand iconic American figures from the 20th century: John F. Kennedy and Jackie Kennedy Onassis, as well as Elvis Presley.
Born in 1953 in Brooklyn, New York, Longo was deeply influenced by social and political issues from an early age. He graduated high school in 1970, weeks after the Ohio National Guard massacred several students at Kent State University who were protesting the US invasion of Cambodiaincluding one of Longos former classmates, whose body was shown in a Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph that shocked the world. In 1973, Longo enrolled at Buffalo State College, where he trained as a sculptor and began his decades-long friendship with fellow artist Cindy Sherman. The two moved to New York together in 1977, and, throughout the 1980s, Longo frequently performed in New York rock clubs in Menthol Wars, his band with Richard Prince. During this period, he also designed album covers for numerous bands and directed music videos for New Order and R.E.M.
In his first solo exhibition at Metro Pictures in New York in 1981, Longo showed his charcoal and graphite Men in the Cities drawings, works that became icons of the Pictures Generation. This group, which includes Longo, Sherman, Prince, Louise Lawler, and David Salle, is known for critiquing the anaesthetizing power of consumer capitalism and the indoctrinating effects of mass media through their art. Working with diverse materials at increasingly ambitious scales over the course of his career, Longo cemented himself as a preeminent artist of his generation. Today, his work can be found in the collections of major museums around the world, including the Museum of Modern Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, and Brooklyn Museum in New York; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.; the Milwaukee Art Museum; the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis; the Albertina Museum in Vienna; the Centre Pompidou in Paris; the Tate in London; the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam; and many other international institutions.
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