He creates installation work using motifs of familiar furniture and daily necessities from everyday life. He combines techniques of drawing and painting and constructs three-dimensional work. He provides us with a rediscovery of the flow of memory and reality, and the relationship of oneself and others by recreating normal worlds with intentional gaps and deformations.
She has created an installation work at Kanagawa Prefectural Gallery’s largest exhibition room. It’s a massive work with intersecting and waving lights from projections of LED lights on silver plastic films. She reconstructs light and the flow of time in the natural world that surrounds humans making full use of her unique technique, which can be described as a form of industrial art.
She connects fragments of unspecified multiple images, which she has picked up from books or the Internet, to create art objects of humans, animals and daily necessities. She has constructed an installation work which creates a feeling of tension by overlapping image projections on these objects. She re-examines our relationship with media, society and everyday life, which is to say the flow of time.
Photo credits
Satoru Eguchi (right) | Dirk Pauwels
Kazue Taguchi (left) | Lower Manhattan Cultural Council
Midori Harima (left) | Tom Powel
Midori Harima (right) | Mariano C. Peuser