Galerie Karsten Greve is pleased to announce the exhibition Woman of Fire Dancing with Tree, a
comprehensive solo-show presenting new works by Leiko Ikemura. The exhibition, is staged in
celebration of the 30-year collaboration between Karsten Greve and the artist, which began with a
solo-show in 1987 in the gallery’s former exhibition space located at Wallrafplatz in Cologne. A
publication with texts by Dr. Katharina Winnekes and Dr. Barbara J. Scheuermann will accompany the
exhibition.
The plethora of media in which Leiko Ikemura’s oeuvre expresses itself encompasses painting,
sculpture and drawing as artistic genres. Its motifs, mainly centered on themes of embodiment and
transformation, reflect both the artist’s formal autonomy as well as flexible dexterities and artistic
skillset. In her fairytale scenarios, evocative of a dream-like sensibility and inhabited by hybrid
creatures, cats, birds and girls merge while humanoid figures and landscape formations amalgamate,
telling of metamorphosis and mutations.
Shapes are often merely alluded to and not fully fleshed out, only
rendering themselves visible in their entirety upon intent study, then
dissipating at a breath of wind. Hazy wafts of mist conciliate bodies
of water with mountainous vistas, dissolve the horizon and then
condense into faces appearing abruptly like a chimaera. Akin to a
figure-ground illusion, the curvature of the river bend is also the
outline of a graciously swung body. Figurines turn into ghostly
entities, manifestations of nature in its most intrinsic form. Floating,
disembodied heads with hair ablaze in flames, emblematic of the
element fire – or perhaps the embodiment of a petulant force of
nature – appear at times gentle and alternatingly tumultuous
(Floating Storm, Haruko). In Ikemura’s Trees series, a typology of
temperament in which the crowns of the trees are in either a hottempered,
sanguine turmoil or a state of downtrodden melancholia,
the trees reveal themselves as manifold variations of individual
personalities. Occasionally the gold dust embellishment of the
surface suggests a reference to alchemy, a tenet primarily concerned
with the transfer of energy in the transmutation of base metals into
gold and silver.
Ikemura’s cosmology of flux and transformation
follows a pantheistic worldview, according to which
god is inherent in all things. Plato had defined this
omnipresent world-soul as “self-moving motion”. In
the context of a cosmic framework but also within
the individual, the soul is the origin of life, liaising
between the mind and body, between being and
becoming. As the ultimate impetus for creation, it
transmutes inanimate matter into living creatures; a
piercing creative energy that brings with it change,
conforming to the cosmological law defined by
Heraclitus in the Panta Rhei formula as eternal
flow: “All entities move and nothing remains still”.
Leiko Ikemura’s works transport the variability of a constantly evolving body of work, in which also
the unique qualities of the materials are seminally
exploited as productive potential throughout the
artistic process. While in traditional art theory, the
ambition is to transform raw material into sublime
form through either the mastery or even subjugation of
the working material, Ikemura grants the material a
creative intrinsic value of its own. The untamed
essence of the substance, which erupts like volcanic
lava and leaves an aftermath of earthen lumps and
amorphous clusters, takes shape in the artist’s
terracotta sculptures. An unpredictable drive inheres in
the sculpted form, a transformative energy at its core
that seeks to pierce through its surface. Often the
moment of transmutation seems to occur while in an
outward state of deep slumber, so that sleeping heads are rendered as stones while life unfolds at an unhurried pace, trees sprouting from the surface of a
face. The natural and untreated quality of the jutep, which Ikemura uses for her paintings, possesses a
distinct appeal. Its rustic surface texture permeates to the surface of the works as the elements within
the composition – articulated with a glaze of watered down tempera – interact in a manner brimming
with tension.
Leiko Ikemura’s creation myths are sensitive
reflections of artistic creativity that incorporate
different cultures and religions. The artist herself draws
from multiple sources and traditions. After studying
Spanish literature in her native Japan, she emigrated to
Spain in 1972. From 1973 until 1978 she studied
painting at the art academy in Sevilla. After moving to
Switzerland she became part of the art scene in Zurich,
leaving a lasting impact. In 1983, the Bonner
Kunstverein showed her works for the first time.
Numerous solo and group shows followed, such as the
exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art in
Basle, Switzerland in 1987. Aside from distinguished international shows throughout the years her
work was last displayed in a memorable presentation in the Museum of Eastern Asian Art in Cologne
in 2016. As she freely moves between
the continents, Ikemura internalizes
myths and legends, incorporating
universal imagery into her pictorial
language. Her repository of motifs
contains archaic shapes, which, like
archetypes, reference existential
conditions as well as the origins of the
human experience.