Tetsuya Ishida, My Anxious Self

Gagosian
555 West 24th Street, New York
September 12- October 21, 2023

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During a ten-year career cut short by his premature death, Tetsuya Ishida (1973–2005) made more than two hundred paintings that capture the anxieties and trauma he shared with countless young Japanese people who reached adulthood in the 1990s, the country’s “Lost Decade” that followed the burst of its bubble economy. Ishida started painting in 1995, at the height of the economic stagnation, when Japan was also shaken by tragedies such as earthquakes and terrorist attacks. But he also grew up witnessing the unthinkable advancement of technology—with the widespread popularization of personal computers, cell phones, and the Internet—and the golden age of manga and anime, with their fantastic fusions of humans and machines in dystopian universes.

 

Ishida’s unique style was influenced by both Social Realism’s depictions of harsh contemporary reality and Surrealism’s use of the imagination as antidote to a world lost to alienation. He stands out as a singular voice amid the kawaii (cute) aesthetic that dominated mass culture and contemporary art in Japan in the 1990s. Through meticulous detail and exacting observation, his works present profoundly estranged individuals and convey the inescapable sense of emptiness that pervaded society at that time.

Through an impressively extensive production over the course of just a decade, Ishida not only represented the youth of his era but also anticipated many of the anxieties and preoccupations that define contemporary generations. While they depict worlds of isolation and solitude in which technology seems to separate more than unite, Ishida’s works also call for a greater emphasis on human connection, and for a reevaluation of our values and priorities as a society. Though his career was ended by a tragic incident when he was only thirty-one, Ishida’s legacy endures. In the wake of the many crises that have marked the last decade, his art appears more prophetic than ever, inspiring viewers to reflect on today’s challenges and to seek meaning and community in a world that too often feels absurd and alienating.

 Photos by Robert McKeever

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