Arisa Kumagai|Heaven Stolen

 

Arisa Kumagai|Heaven Stolen
Saturday, August 23 - Saturday, October 11, 2025
[Opening Reception:Saturday, August 23, 2025, 5-7pm]

Gallery Koyanagi is pleased to announce Heaven Stolen, a solo exhibition by Arisa Kumagai, which will be held from Saturday, August 23 to Saturday, October 11, 2025. This marks Kumagai’s fourth solo exhibition at Gallery Koyanagi, following Single bed in 2019, My yearning to be You in 2022, and …apparently God is forgiving in 2023, her first in two years.

Drawing on deeply personal motifs, her grandfather dressed in high-end Italian shirt from the family-run boutique, the adorned hands of her mother and other women wearing an eclectic mix of flamboyant jewelry, and flowers offered to her father who died alone, Kumagai’s work reflects universal themes such as wealth and poverty, life and death. Through these intimate recollections, she transforms private memory into works of art that transcend individual experience. Her dramatic imagery resonates with the viewer’s own memories and experiences, evoking a deep sense of empathy and connections to their personal life stories. In recent years, Kumagai has studied at a Catholic church and deepened her interest in the forms of faith she encountered during her time in New York and Paris. At the same time, she has also begun to depict motifs of prayer rooted in Japanese culture. She is now entering a new phase of expression, weaving together her paintings with poems of her own creation.

The unforgettable and striking title of this exhibition, Heaven Stolen, meaning thief of heaven, is drawn from Christian belief. It is said that some use this phrase in Japan to refer to those who receive baptism as death approaches. Heaven is the place where the souls of the faithful find eternal peace in the presence of God. In principle, entry to heaven is not determined by one’s deeds, but is a path open to all who believe in Jesus Christ. Yet for those who have devoted their lives to serving God, the so-called “thief of heaven,” someone who turns to faith only at the hour of death, may appear opportunistic, even prompting thoughts like “How unfair” or “How sly.” Kumagai acknowledges that this raw, undeniable human response resonates with her own inner experience. It may be that love and hate, though opposites, are inseparable, and that this tension lies at the root of our emotional being.

The triptych titled “It’s OK. It’s OK. It’s OK.” features a composition of small sneakers and flowers in a vase. The worn-out children’s shoes are said to have been given by a man to his child, a man who had once been violent toward the child, grew estranged from his family, and eventually died alone. The phrase “It’s OK,” used as a title, may at first sound gentle, but its rapid repetition three times conveys the artist’s anger toward the ongoing and unresolved issue of child abuse. Beyond the flowers, one sees a statue of the Virgin Mary, a symbol of unconditional love, and a small cross gently swaying at the end of a rosary. It is as if one can hear a quiet prayer, wishing for the protection of children who are suffering somewhere in the world, right at this moment.

“Say yes to me” is a work born out of Kumagai’s reverence for the beauty and terror inherent in the primitive. On a canvas the size of a single bed, in keeping with Kumagai’s distinctive style, she depicts a young deer, shot and exposed in a river. Since ancient times, the motifs of the river and deer have been revered in sacred spaces across cultures. Yet they are also objects of fear, beings that hold within them an inherent duality.
Kumagai combined this work with a piece from her “Leisure Class” series, which she had been developing since her student days.The term Leisure Class refers to those who consume luxury goods to display social prestige, and it is deeply connected to Kumagai’s personal background. A closer look at the bold pattern on the man’s silk shirt reveals the barrel of a gun pointing toward the young deer depicted in the adjacent panel, an image that can be read as an allusion to the ongoing racial tensions that persist in contemporary society. A total of six new paintings, including four other large-scale and smaller oil works in addition to the mentioned two, as well as ten drawings will be on display.

A reception will be held on the opening day, Saturday, August 23, from 5:00 to 7:00 PM, with the artist in attendance. An artist talk is also planned for the same evening. We would be grateful for your interest and coverage of this occasion.

 


Arisa Kumagai|Heaven Stolen
Exhibition dates:Saturday, August 23 - Saturday, October 11, 2025
[Opening Reception:Saturday, August 23, 2025, 5-7pm]
*The artist will be present at the gallery and will give an artist talk starting around 6pm.

Opening hours: 12-7 pm
Closed on Sundays, Mondays and National Holidays

Address: Gallery Koyanagi
Koyanagi Bldg. 9F, 1-7-5 Ginza, Chuo-ku,
Tokyo 104-0061, JAPAN
Tel.+81-(0)3-3561-1896 / Fax. +81-(0)3-3563-3236
Email: mail@gallerykoyanagi.com
www.gallerykoyanagi.com

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