is a Japanese
pop artist and member of
Takashi Murakami
is a Japanese contemporary artist. He works in fine arts (such as painting and sculpture) as well as commercial media (such as fashion, merchandise, and animation) and is known for blurring the line between High art, high and low arts. His wo ...
's
Kaikai Kiki Collective. Aoshima graduated from the Department of Economics,
Hosei University, Tokyo. She held a residency at
Art Pace,
San Antonio
San Antonio ( ; Spanish for " Saint Anthony") is a city in the U.S. state of Texas and the most populous city in Greater San Antonio. San Antonio is the third-largest metropolitan area in Texas and the 24th-largest metropolitan area in the ...
,
United States
The United States of America (USA), also known as the United States (U.S.) or America, is a country primarily located in North America. It is a federal republic of 50 U.S. state, states and a federal capital district, Washington, D.C. The 48 ...
in 2006.
Personal life
Aoshima was unhappy while studying economics at Hosei University. In an interview with
Saatchi Art Aoshima admitted that, "I was bored to death, even when I was hanging out with my friends. I was eager to create something but didn’t know what to create, every day time passed so slowly and I felt like I was going to die." She taught herself how to use
Adobe Illustrator
Adobe Illustrator is a vector graphics editor and Computer-aided design, design software developed and marketed by Adobe Inc., Adobe. Originally designed for the Apple Inc., Apple Mac (computer), Macintosh, development of Adobe Illustrator began ...
and began to fall in love with the medium.
After participating in her first show, Murakami's ''Tokyo Girls Bravo, ''she began to work in Murakami's factory.
Aoshima's work often involves surreal scenes and dreamscapes, often including ghosts, demons, nature and
shōjo.
Her work also features contrasting themes such as nature and civilization, creation and destruction and life and death. Aoshima mostly prints large scale images onto papers with heavy-duty printers, but she has also printed on materials such as leather and plastic surfaces to give her images different textures.
Aoshima also works in sculpture and animation, her largest image yet is from her City Glow Series. She displayed this work in an exhibition on a disused platform of the
Gloucester Road tube station in London during 2006 and at the
14th Street – Union Square subway station in New York City.
It measures 32.5 meters in length and 4.8 meters in height.
Aesthetic influences
Aoshima's work can be thought to come from somewhere in between innocent reality and a twisted dream world. Aoshima states that, "My work feels like strands of my thoughts that have flown around the universe before coming back to materialise."
Ukiyo-e
It's easy to see traditional Japanese artistic tendencies in her artwork. Chiho has said that
ukiyo-e
is a genre of Japanese art that flourished from the 17th through 19th centuries. Its artists produced woodblock printing, woodblock prints and Nikuhitsu-ga, paintings of such subjects as female beauties; kabuki actors and sumo wrestlers; scenes ...
painter and printmaker
Hokusai
, known mononymously as Hokusai, was a Japanese ukiyo-e artist of the Edo period, active as a painter and printmaker. His woodblock printing in Japan, woodblock print series ''Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji'' includes the iconic print ''The Gr ...
has had a great deal of influence in how she approaches her artistic renderings. Much like the traditional ukiyo-e compositions, her subjects are drawn with a well defined flat line and are placed in a single plane of depth. The ukiyo-e principals also play a heavy influence on her overarching style principal known as
superflat
Superflat is a postmodern art movement, founded by Japanese contemporary artist Takashi Murakami, which is influenced by manga and anime. However, superflat does not have an explicit definition because Takashi Murakami does not want to limit ...
.
Superflat
Aoshima's works are considered
superflat
Superflat is a postmodern art movement, founded by Japanese contemporary artist Takashi Murakami, which is influenced by manga and anime. However, superflat does not have an explicit definition because Takashi Murakami does not want to limit ...
, the postmodern art movement which was founded by
Takashi Murakami
is a Japanese contemporary artist. He works in fine arts (such as painting and sculpture) as well as commercial media (such as fashion, merchandise, and animation) and is known for blurring the line between High art, high and low arts. His wo ...
. Using digital drawing tools Aoshima creates unique scenes featuring nymphettes cavorting with animals, cheerleaders gone awry, and blood-stained sashimi slicers, all depicted with soft, cool colors, little modeling, and a dreamy, teen point of view.
For ''Superflat'', a 2001 exhibition at the
Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, Aoshima scaled up ''The red-eyed tribe'', a highly detailed landscape filled with stylish young women, originally made for an
Issey Miyake advertisement, to a massive fifteen by fifty-two feet. Because of the nature of the medium, there was no loss of clarity in the production of the giant digital prints, and the transference of the intimate, hand-held scale of mango to billboard bombast illuminates the possibilities of the simplified manga look for environmental applications.
Shōjo
Aoshima's heavy use of feminine figures with big eyes, small facial features, thin bodies makes the
shōjo's, a young woman approximately 7–18 years old,
Shogakukan
is a Japanese publisher of comics, magazines, light novels, dictionaries, literature, non-fiction, home media, and other media in Japan.
Shogakukan founded Shueisha, which also founded Hakusensha. These are three separate companies, but ...
Daijisen Editorial Staff (1998), (Dictionary of the Japanese language), Revised Edition. Tokyo: Shogakukan
is a Japanese publisher of comics, magazines, light novels, dictionaries, literature, non-fiction, home media, and other media in Japan.
Shogakukan founded Shueisha, which also founded Hakusensha. These are three separate companies, but ...
. . body cute but sometimes ugly, scary, and funny. The physical transgressions and unpleasant presentations challenge what is cute and beautiful about the objectified shōjo, and Aoshima makes this point via a flowery, cute shōjo aesthetic.
Aoshima takes the motherly and worldly form of the feminine figure and transforms the childlike atmospheres into grotesque scenes. She keeps just enough of the classic shōjo aesthetic to remain cute and docile but distorts it into another otherworldly, monstrous, theme.
“Because of the places where I’m presenting my work, I sometimes feel I have to make lighter, happier images ... But I really enjoy drawing the dark, disturbing worlds. Of course, in the end, even those should be cute,” she has said.
Artists who use shōjo techniques are often critiqued for perpetuating cultural norms through their use of gender defining roles for their female characters. Oftentimes shōjo is seen as a feminist movement, however Chiho denies any such political affiliation.
Galleries
*
Galerie Perrotin, Paris, France
*
Kaikai Kiki Collective, Long Island, NY
Permanent collections
*
Ackland Art Museum, Chapel Hill, NC
*
Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, IL
*
Carnegie Museum of Art
The Carnegie Museum of Art is an art museum in the Oakland (Pittsburgh), Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. The museum was originally known as the Department of Fine Arts, Carnegie Institute and was formerly located ...
, Pittsburgh, PA
*
Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, WA
Associated people
*
Takashi Murakami
is a Japanese contemporary artist. He works in fine arts (such as painting and sculpture) as well as commercial media (such as fashion, merchandise, and animation) and is known for blurring the line between High art, high and low arts. His wo ...
*
Issey Miyake
References
External links
Chiho Aoshima at Kaikai Kiki CollectiveExamples of workArticle, with photographCity Glow, Mountain WhisperPhoto gallery of Gloucester Road underground station exhibit.
"Chiho Aoshime" ''Little Boy'' (2005, ed.
Takashi Murakami
is a Japanese contemporary artist. He works in fine arts (such as painting and sculpture) as well as commercial media (such as fashion, merchandise, and animation) and is known for blurring the line between High art, high and low arts. His wo ...
)
Chiho Aoshima Biography on life
{{DEFAULTSORT:Aoshima, Chiho
1974 births
Living people
Japanese contemporary artists
21st-century Japanese painters
Japanese pop artists
Artists from Tokyo
20th-century Japanese women artists
21st-century Japanese women artists