Title: no title, Medium: Unfired clay pool with used Dutch engine oil, fluorescent light, copper glazed ceramic form (2015) © Kentaro Yamada

Private view

Thursday 6 June 2019
6:00pm – 8:00pm

Private View: Everything Comes in Waves by Kentaro Yamada

13/14 Cornwall Terrace, Outer Circle (entrance facing Regent's Park), London NW1 4QP

Organised by the Daiwa Anglo-Japanese Foundation

The Private View was a chance to have a first look at the exhibition Everything Comes in Waves  by the London-based Japanese artist Kentaro Yamada.

Yamada is interested in the encounter between material history and humankind’s subjectivity. As subjective and creative beings, humans have been intuitively trying to create meanings out of our natural surroundings for millions of years.

The artist creates poetic situations that allow viewers to experience encounters of human life and material history.  He reminds us that values born out of human history provide a partial view of the world and seeks to place this story within broader physical contexts, exploring different scales from the hand-held to the cosmic and from the instantaneous to the universal.

In this exhibition, Kentaro Yamada presents a combination of new and old works, which will include light installations, dyeline prints that he created in 2011 after the Tōhoku Earthquake and Tsunami, and a series of sculptural objects as a poetic installation that connect to a larger notion of cosmic space and time.

This exhibition is curated by Francesca von Zedtwitz-Arnim.

About the contributors

Kentaro Yamada

Kentaro Yamada (b.1978) completed an MFA at The School of Art Institute of Chicago and Goldsmiths with Distinction. He has been exhibiting internationally and recent exhibitions include: Perfume Shop, The Ryder Projects (2019), Common Third, Copperfield (2018); Sound of Scent, Victoria and Albert Museum (2017); before breakfast we talked about the furthest possible point before it all disappeared, Tenderpixel, London UK (2014); b.d., MARS!, Munich, Germany (2014); All That Is Solid Melts Into Air: From Interactive To Interpassive, Gallery Momo, Tokyo, Japan (2013).

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