Yohei Yama

Yohei Yama

Yohei Yama was born in Japan and currently lives and works in France. A component common to the majority of Yohei’s works seen here is the miniature trees – something that came to Yohei whilst in shock after Fukushima, probably the most devastating nuclear accident in the history of mankind. You may not have heard much in the press recently about Fukushima but that doesn’t mean it’s no longer a problem as you can see here.

Energy of the sun
Yohei Yama
91cm x 117cm
acrylic and ink on canvas
2013
Energy of the sun Yohei Yama 91cm x 117cm acrylic and ink on canvas 2013
Like a Travelling Bird
Yohei Yama
100cm x 100cm
acrylic and ink on canvas
2013
Like a Travelling Bird Yohei Yama 100cm x 100cm acrylic and ink on canvas 2013
Energy of the moon
Yohei Yama
91cm x 117cm
acrylic and ink on canvas
2013
Energy of the moon Yohei Yama 91cm x 117cm acrylic and ink on canvas 2013

Right after the disaster hit Japan in 2011, I was too shocked and could not work on my paintings for many days. Suddenly a motif of a small tree came into my mind. I don`t know why but the more I drew the motif, the more I got filled with energy and I was able to start again. I realized that the trees are healing for me, for people, for nature which humans have destroyed.

Did you study art? If so, where?
No, I am a self-taught artist. Nature is my teacher.

Circle of life
Yohei Yama
100cm x 100cm
acrylic and ink on canvas
2013
Circle of life Yohei Yama 100cm x 100cm acrylic and ink on canvas 2013
Spiral
Yohei Yama
72.7cm x 60.6cm
acrylic and ink on canvas
2013
Spiral Yohei Yama 72.7cm x 60.6cm acrylic and ink on canvas 2013
Star
Yohei Yama
91cm x 72.7cm
acrylic and ink on canvas
2013
Star Yohei Yama 91cm x 72.7cm acrylic and ink on canvas 2013

Why do you like Op Art?
Because for me Op Art is so spiritual; I gives me a very good feeling to see this kind of art. Also my eyes like the magical vibration of Op Art.

How do you make your art?
I paint with acrylic and pen. I just follow my feelings and inspiration – there’s no calculation involved.

What’s the process for making one of your artworks?
First I paint with acrylic to lay down the colour and create the environment; then I plant little trees (my motif) all over the canvas. To plant all these little trees is like a kind of meditation for me.

Yohei Yama - Unnamed 1
Yohei Yama – Unnamed 1
Yohei Yama - Unnamed 2
Yohei Yama – Unnamed 2
Yohei Yama - Unnamed 3
Yohei Yama – Unnamed 3

Any other art you like and other artists that inspire or have inspired you.
My inspiration is… the universe, sun, moon, wind, birds, trees, flowers… Nature has shown me beautiful moments and it has always inspired me.

I like any artist who has an original and unique style – I mean when you see some painting and you immediately recognize who it is that has painted it – I respect that.

Final thoughts?
I always want to feel the magic that it is to live on planet Earth, this unique planet in the vast expanse of the universe. So precious. I want to study more, I want to have more experiences, and I want to grow more to be better. ARIGATOU.

Let it Grow
Yohei Yama
100cm x 100cm
acrylic and ink on canvas
2013
Let it Grow Yohei Yama 100cm x 100cm acrylic and ink on canvas 2013
Wind
Yohei Yama
72.7cm x 60.6cm
acrylic and ink on canvas
2013
Wind Yohei Yama 72.7cm x 60.6cm acrylic and ink on canvas 2013
Cosmos
Yohei Yama
100cm x 100cm
acrylic and ink on canvas
2013
Cosmos Yohei Yama 100cm x 100cm acrylic and ink on canvas 2013

Up coming Solo Exhibitions.
Aug 28-Sep 3, 2014 at Gallery Consept21 TOKYO
Sep 6-21,2014 at Diginner Gallery TOKYO

You can see more of Yohei’s work on his website.

http://yoheiyama.net/

Polly Merredew @ XYZ at Quad, Derby, UK

Polly Merredew @ XYZ at Quad, Derby, UK

Polly Merredew is taking part in a new exhibition at Quad in Derby (QUAD, Market Place, Cathedral Quarter, DerbyDE1 3AS). The exhibition is part of a series of 3-D inspired events taking place at Quad. The exhibition runs through to Sunday 23rd February 2014. Entrance is free. The organisers found Polly’s work through this site so I’m kind of pleased about that.

Untitled - Polly Merredew

Untitled
120cm x 120cm
Acrylic on Canvas
Polly Merredew

“X-Y-Z  is an exhibition that explores 3D through the work of international artists utilising age-old techniques such as lenticulars, autostereograms, stereograms, holography and anaglyph 3D. Here these classic and nostalgia-inducing methods which offer us the illusion of depth and three-dimensionality are embraced and championed.

Using these techniques the artists play with the notion of perception and sensation, giving us an opportunity to view the world in a unique and playful way. Each artist tackles different concepts within their work, from Thomas Hämén’s series Metadata (stereogram) inspired by the computer generated Magic Eye® autostereograms from the 1990s, to Chloe Humenko’s stunning filmic anaglyphic 3D photographs, evoking memories of classic 3D cinema.

The resulting exhibition takes us on a nostalgic journey through the recent history of 3D technology and how it is being applied creatively to contemporary art practice.”

“OpEvol” – Op Art iPhone/iPad visualisations app

“OpEvol” – Op Art iPhone/iPad visualisations app

Scott from Muddlegeist software has recently released an iPhone / iPad app that generates an ever changing series of Op Art inspired patterns.

OpEvol screen shot

“A few weeks ago I was a bit ill, and spent some time laying around and playing with some iOS code I was writing for an audio app that I have in progress.  I stumbled on an animation technique I hadn’t used before, and was hooked on playing with some of the visual aspects of it which reminded me of the classics of Op Art.  This led me to become sidetracked on a new project which became Op Evol.”

OpEvol screen shot

I’ve had a play around with the app and it’s quite good fun – you can change the animation type between a series of presets and then change settings (such as animation speed) within each animation.

The app is available now in the iTunes store here:

OpEvol for UK iTunes

OpEvol for US iTunes

“Inspired by Op Art of the 1960s, OpEvol takes the geometric play of colors and contrasts and animates them into a moving field of ever-changing psychedelic eye candy. It’s for staring at. It’s for sending to Air Display. It’s for playing with, and then staring at it some more.”

Vasarely theft

Vasarely theft

Be careful who you let in your house, particularly if you have original works by Victor Vasarely.

A Florida woman was ordered held on a $10,000 bond after she stole works from a legally blind man – Gilbert Jackson – that she supposedly cared for, including an original Vasarely work valued at approx. $30,000 – $35,000. Maureen Stuteville, 46, appeared in court remotely via video before Florida Judge John Hurley. She faces a charge of exploitation of a disabled elderly adult.

stuteville vasarely

Maureen Stuteville has been accused of stealing numerous high value art works from the blind man she ‘cared’ for

In early December (2013), Jackson realised that his original Victor Vasarely work was missing from the house. Stuteville told him the painting was somewhere in Boca and later said it was at an art gallery. Days later Jackson asked to get his painting back, and Stuteville told him he would have to give her $3,000 and an automobile before she would return the painting, according to the report.

After Jackson’s friends discovered an invoice to an antique gallery in Dania Beach, Stuteville admitted to a friend that she had sold the Vasarely work, together with other expensive paintings and sculptures that Jackson owned. The gallery owner acknowledged that he had bought the works but had no idea they were stolen. He said Stuteville was a regular visitor and had told him that she was selling the works to pay for the car of her adoptive father with cancer.

Stuteville claims Jackson asked her to sell the works. Jackson claims otherwise. I have a feeling I know who to believe on this one.

 

Riley / Rehberger plagiarism row reaches agreement

Riley / Rehberger plagiarism row reaches agreement

Tobias Rehberger is a German artist, famous for his large scale installations, notably “Slinky springs to to fame” – a giant ‘slinky’ bridge corssing the Rhein-Herne Canal in the Imperial Garden, Oberhausen.

Slinky Springs To Fame

Slinky Springs To Fame

A few years ago he was commissioned to create a piece for the Berlin National Library. The result was “Uhrenobjekt” (“Watch Object”) a giant black and white checkered painting that bore a marked similarity to Bridget Riley‘s “Movement in Squares“. Riley was not pleased.

Rehberger's "Uhrenobjekt" - photo by Jörg F. Müller

Rehberger’s “Uhrenobjekt” – photo by Jörg F. Müller

Bridget Riley - Movement in Squares

Bridget Riley’s “Movement in Squares”

Bridget Riley quickly launched a plagiarism lawsuit against Rehberger demanding the removal of the painting from the Library. The German courts didn’t grant the removal request but as a result of the suit, the painting has been covered up for over a year.

The case has now been resolved and the painting is back on display with a new title: “Uhrenobjekt nach Movement in Squares von Bridget Riley” (“Watch Object after Movement in Squares by Bridget Riley”).

It’s an interesting case. Clearly the works are very similar but there are also differences – the grid is not the same for example, nor the location of the ‘fold’. Is it really possible for Riley to claim copyright over a black and white grid in that way? I have a lot of sympathy for Riley here but it’s a difficult case. It’s also not the first time Riley has gone to court to protect her work – in the 1960s she famously sued a fashion house for creating a range of clothing  that used one of her pieces as the pattern. She lost that case. On balance it appears that she has probably lost this one too although the name change is at least some kind of consolation.