Press Release
Yuichi Hirako deals with the coexistence and interdependent relationship between nature and humans through his original style of depiction, in which metaphors and symbols stand out. In his second solo exhibition with Gallery Baton, Hirako manifests his interests and particular subjects in richer expression by organically combining painting with sculpture or installation and selectively applying traits of diverse media.
International Archives 1st half of 2024
He was born and spent his childhood in Okayama Prefecture of Japan, whose natural environment is outstanding and fertile. Having acknowledged that a dense forest adjacent to his village plays a pivotal role in the whole local ecosystem every flora and fauna relies on, he could naturally pay attention to how urban green areas and indoor plants had developed mainly to comfort people psychologically while studying in London. Addressing questions like “Are they destined to be implanted in artificial spaces, be controlled in the basic activity of living, and cease to exist one by one?” his critical awareness of how people treat nature grew into the fundamental theme of his practice. His viewpoint is related to the philosophy of Deep ecology, which understands nature as a unified totality. Thus, through his extraordinary visual language, Hirako has consistently insisted that nature is an independent object that deserves respect and fair treatment rather than being a target to overcome or dominate.
The hybrid character, not only a central leitmotif but a basis of his work, appears frequently in his practice; moreover, other plant and animal figures including dogs and cats, nourish the complex narrative and construct the details of the entire storyline multi-
The exhibition title, New Home, is Hirako’s alternative answer about the ideal universe of the future that would fold later on, as suggested from the human point of view. An evident tendency of the current world, where nature has become a target of extreme exploitation, is radical faith in scientific rationality and rhetoric. From this biased perspective, even if taking only the appearance of hybrid characters into account, the practice by Hirako seems surreal and uncanny enough. Ironically, he points out from such a point and re-
Yuichi Hirako (b.1982) has held solo exhibitions at numerous museums including Space K Seoul, KR (2023); Nerima Art Museum, JP (2022); and Tokyo Opera City Art Gallery, JP (2018). He has been active in the global art scene, presenting a large-
Exhibition 05 June -
© ArtCatalyse International / Marika Prévosto 2024 All Rights Reserved
Installation view: Yuichi Hirako, New Home, Gallery Baton, Seoul, June 5—uly 13, 2024. Courtesy of Gallery Baton.