Miya Ando, November Kumo (Cloud) 3, 2017, Ink on Aluminum Composite, 49.5 x 49.5 x 2 Inches Framed
EXHIBITION DATES
January 4 to February 22, 2018
Nancy Toomey Fine Art is pleased to announce an exhibition of works by Miya Ando entitled Oborozuki (Moon Obscured by Clouds) on view from January 4 to February 22, 2018. The gallery is located inside San Francisco’s Minnesota Street Project, 1275 Minnesota Street.
Miya Ando, Yaoke (Dawn) 4.8, 2017, Pigment, Dye, Urethane, Resin, Aluminum, 48 x 96 Inches
Miya Ando’s inspiration for this exhibition is the Japanese word Oborozuki, meaning “the moon obscured by clouds.” Pieces in the show, Ando’s second at Nancy Toomey Fine Art, include a new series of paintings on aluminum entitled Yoake (Dawn), ink on aluminum called Kumo (Cloud), as well as works on paper, Gekkou (Moonlight).
Miya Ando Oborozuki (Moon Obscured by Clouds) Installation View
Ando’s inspiration for the theme of this exhibition is derived from the oldest known Japanese novel The Tale of Genji. Written by Murasaki Shikibu, the book is composed of minute, poetic observations of nature by its lead female protagonist, Lady Murasaki. This ancient novel takes as its premise the fundamental interconnectivity of all things, and the fleeting, transitory awareness this recognition engenders. Nature is depicted not as a force, but as the vehicle that inspires in us contemplation and reverie.
Miya Ando, November Sky Blue Cloud, 2017, Dye on Aluminum, 48 x 48 Inches
The works in this exhibition are an ongoing investigation into time and temporality. Ando employs visual vocabulary drawn from natural phenomena and reimagines it utilizing metal-based materials, as well as a sculptural work on glass. Her paintings of cloud phenomena become a frozen record in time, focusing on the transformative power of shifting light. The works echo the way the sun changes the quality of light in the sky to obscure the true color of everything it strikes.
Miya Ando, Gekkou (Moonlight) November 4, 2017, Pigment, Silver Leaf, Arches Paper, 45.5 x 34.5 x 1.75 Inches Framed
Created by painting on sheets of aluminum with chemicals and then manipulating color and texture using heat, sandpaper, dyes, and other processes, these works nonetheless contain tremendous spiritual depth. Highly industrial and technically painstaking, Ando’s works evoke a meditative quality, born from her own cultural roots and her ongoing Buddhist practice.