PARIS.- Galerie Eric Mouchet is presenting the exhibition "HOU-CHOU" releasing birds dedicated to the Japanese artist Ken Matsubara, from 23 April until 28 May.
Ken Matsubara creates objects vested with immaterial power, which have an influence on our deep consciousness. The moving images that float on the surface or that are mysteriously enclosed in glass, pertain as much to intimate recollection as to the universal, as anyone can relate to them according to ones own references. The artist considers that human consciousness consists of memories from ones ancient knowledge, built up and shared since the mists of time. By passing on this knowledge through generations and from one person to another, it transcends individuality. Matsubara seeks to raise this shared memory and aspires to erase cultural, social and historical boundaries between people.
His works exude melancholy and poetry, with their simple but meaningful evocations. Thanks to the bareness of his purpose, which resembles a story without words endlessly repeated, every little ghost can find their place in our personal history. The use of video echoes the fluid and fluctuating nature of memory, whereas antique-looking objects are similar to reliquaries sheltering fragile apparitions.
In the Hou-chou series, recently produced in several countries across SouthEast Asia, Matsubara studies the bird releasing ceremony that is carried out in Buddhist temples as a vow of virtue. In this practice, as in Buddhism in general, the impermanence of things and humans, the link between them and with the world, are the pillars of a philosophy with universal reach.
Ken Matsubara and collective memories
Ken Matsubara is well-known in Japan and the U.S. for his work fed by images related to the many faces of both personal and collective memories. The photographs and video clips used in his installations seem to resurface from a recent past or a familiar remembrance, emerging from an old garret full of memories. Ken revitalizes these images in his works, making them an active part in the building of a present time. His installations stand out and never leave us indifferent, because they touch the strings of our collective unconscious. ---Mara Sartore Venice, September 28, 2011
Ken Matsubara works have always had a strong relationship with past and memory. His "Clouds" remind us symbolically of the nuclear presence, "Tide" the strong and unavoidable relationship between men and water. But never, as in the series of his new works - The Sleeping Water - Storm in a Glass - has the present situation merged so clearly and dramatically.
Japan is experiencing a very difficult moment today not only because of the Fukushima disaster, and the economic crisis in the western world, but mostly because, just after the earthquake, Japanese people stopped believing and trusting their government.This lack of faith in a supreme authority represents a strong shake-up in their souls. In Japan people have grown up believing in the efficiency and the capacity of their government.
Since Fukushima the feelings and emotions of 120 million Japanese people have never stopped swinging between hope and despair, anger and uncertainty. The water in a glass is normally still, but in Matsubaras video it is swinging and fluctuating just like the mood of people in Japan, just like the wave that came and destroyed, leaving death and desolation behind it. The "Storm in a Glass" represents with a simple image all the weight and significance of a crucial historical moment in the life of the country, which will perhaps change the destiny and the course of their lives. --Mara Sartore Tuesday, 11 October 2011 The story of our encounter