cherry valley forever
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Janaina Medeiros
noise dept.

Product Placement

★

Andulka
Peter Solarz

pixel skylines
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Xuebing Du
d e v o n
KIROKAZE
Cosimo Galluzzi
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
ojovivo
Mike Driver

#extradirty
art blog(derogatory)

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@chieyasposts
Takesada Matsutani
Point de Contact 65-12 (1986)
Vinyl adhesive, acrylic, and graphite transform the surface into a quiet yet powerful presence.
Signal (1971) by Takesada Matsutani.
A simple composition where color, line, and space create a quiet sense of tension. Minimal, yet deeply expressive.
Matsutani Takesada’s Eiffel Tower (1973/2007).
A quiet dialogue between memory, material, and time—where the iconic monument slowly dissolves into the artist’s unique language.
Takesada Matsutani’s Propagation 63. Timeless textures and quiet intensity.
Takesada Matsutani, Work 66-2 (1966).
A single organic form rises from a field of black, where material itself becomes the language of silence. The work feels both fragile and powerful, inviting us to look beyond shape and into presence.
Voices, forms, and fragments of life.
“Proliferation 63-130” (1963) by Takesada Matsutani transforms simple materials into an organic landscape, where repetition and texture evoke growth, memory, and the passage of time.
A lyrical world unfolds through watercolor, pastel, and pen.
Untitled (1970) by Tatsuoki Nambata.
“Work” (1967) by Ayako Miyawaki.
Reflections of light transform a simple geometric structure into a space that feels both solid and transparent.
Interior I: End of Summer
Asao Kawahara, 1998
A quiet room, a fading light, and two figures facing the horizon.
The end of summer often arrives not with a farewell, but with silence.
A visionary design for connection and care.
The Guardian Angel baby monitor receiver and transmitter, designed by Isamu Noguchi and Eugene F. McDonald Jr., transformed technology into a warm and human presence.
Fumio Nambata’s A Sun of the Night (1968).
A dreamlike world unfolds between darkness and light, where delicate lines and mysterious forms invite endless imagination.
Two chairs remain, yet their owners are gone.
Chiharu Shiota’s State of Being (2012) transforms absence into something you can almost feel. Threads weave memory and time into a silent space between what remains and what has disappeared.
Mark Bradford, Creamy Rich Sky, Asphalt Horizon Roll (2014).
Tar, rubber, and memory—
turning labor, history, and landscape into a quiet horizon.
Venus emerging from darkness.
Bert Longo’s 2005 charcoal work captures the planet’s swirling atmosphere with remarkable depth and precision. A quiet and powerful presence on the wall.
Michael Kagan, Those Who Came Before Us (2022). A tribute to Apollo 17 commander Eugene Cernan—the last person to walk on the Moon.
Masaki Yamada’s Work E. 369 (1988–89) blends vivid colors, layered forms, and striking cross motifs. Part of his lifelong Work series, it reflects a continuous exploration of abstraction, structure, and space.