Don Gallery is honored to present works of Kumi Usui's Drawing and Drawing Series at BFC Art Festival, Booth A, BFC North, 600 Zhongshan No.2 Road(E), Shanghai, from 4th August to 7th August 2022.
Don Gallery will present Kumi’s recent works at BFC Art Festival. Her conceptual practice centers on everyday life and emotions. In the series of I’m Drawing & Drawing, she tries to return to the pure state by blurring the boundary between art and life when creating aimless paintings, questioning the meaning of drawing, the truth of life, and the connotation of self.
"Just as the Chinese society went through drastic changes and Chinese contemporary art started to connect to the rest of the world, Kumi Usui visited China for the first time. From Yokohama to Kobe to Shanghai, Kumi’s tour in China extended from a time-limited planned vacation to an indefinite period of study abroad, and later, the artist would find love, and a place of belonging here. Three decades later, Kumi lives and works in China. She speaks fluent Mandarin, and even Chongqing dialect. Just as she immersed herself in practice at the cram school so many years ago, she has immersed herself in painting countless abstract works, with her head bending down, she keeps on paining regardless of the boundaries and forget about causes and results. Her technique combines the gestural brushstrokes of Japanese calligraphy and the wandering style of Western abstract painting. Acrylic paint covers sheets and sheets of sketchbook sized paper. The works are varied. Some feature a few brushstrokes, and a smattering of canny points and lines. Others are dense and passionate — covering the entire sheets with a single color, often blue. Intuition is clearly in charge here, with many brushstrokes made almost unconsciously, but what lies behind the mental engineering that guides one’s intuition and instinct? This is the question that Kumi Usui meditates upon in her artistic practice -- the essence of life, and how to create art that returns to the origin of joy, motivation, and meaning."
Adapted from “Drawing and Drawing: Heading Out and Bending Down” by WANG Kaimei