|
THE
YOMIURI SHIMBUN, 23 JULY 2000
“Painting
is landscape” – vibration generated by the fusion of various
ones.
By
Kiyoshi AKUTAGAWA
We tend to see a landscape in every figure. Spots or
scratches on a wall, irregular lines in a tea cup created by the enamel
on it, each thing looks like a landscape to us. It is, in a certain sense,
a vice of man. But we should not pay too much attention to it.
Also here I see a landscape: a long outline of mountains, higher peaks
out of focus in the distance. In the foreground, the surface of varied
layers full of detail. Our eyes enjoy with satisfaction and the mind opens
with great liberty. Up to this point we’re talking about software,
that is to say, what is aroused by the figures. The rest has to do with
hardware: what is evoked by such visions. The thing that is in front of
me is, in reality, a piece of iron. What looks like mountains in earth
tones is instead a rust stain. Over there where I see the sky, is an area
covered with layers of paper and painted with watercolor. The rough texture
of the rust and the sensation of the stratified and hardened paper give
a “tactile sphere” to this work.
The battle between two completely different materials: iron and paper.
The battle between colors which penetrate from the upper layer and those
which emerge from the lower layer. And still another battle between a
natural phenomenon, corrosion. and painting which is a human intervention.
In this work, you can feel the battle between the various disciplines
which exist contemporarily, generating a landscape full of vibrations
which give rise to an extraordinary sense of peace. Here, different elements
echo among themselves while maintaining their diversity. Shuhei Matsuyama
reflects: “This is what I wanted to create. I had a dream of expressing
the synergy between different things: between hard and soft, between west
and east.” The artist has chosen a single title, “Shin-on”,
for all the works he has created in these years. He has lived and worked
in Italy for 25 years, and explains he has finally realized that his objective
is to create the expression of “ki” (atmosphere, energy):
“In the period when I studied painting in Perugia, my eyes often
came to rest on spots on the walls while I walked through the city. Those
spots spoke to me. I wondered what it meant. It was an energy that was
speaking to me. I feel the same type of energy emanating from ancient
incised designs in rocks found in northern Italy. As for the rust, usually
we have the idea of something negative, undesired, which signals the end
of things. However, faced with such an irrepressible proliferation of
its earth tones, it’s not possible to not perceive the energy, the
sensation of something’s beginning, something which is being born
in front of your eyes. I hope that also my works vibrate in a similar
way, welling up from within the heart. This is in fact the meaning of
SHIN-ON. In Japanese it can mean various concepts of sound or vibration,
depending on the ideograms used: the sound of the heart, the sound of
vibration, the sound of the body, the sound of truth, and so on. There
can be infinite combinations of ideograms – in other words, concepts
– but perhaps the thing I’m searching for is a universe which
begins with one blow from nothing with a great rush of energy (ki)”.
Along side his artistic creation, Shuhei Matsuyama has been involved for
years in karate and is a fourth dan black belt in the Shotokan school;
he is a master and trains a hundred students in Milan. At the beginning,
he wasn’t aware of the bond between the two disciplines. Painting
and karate were two completely different, distant worlds, but after years
of training, today Matsuyama recognizes a certain influence of karate
in his art. For example, “sun-dome”, the concept of stopping
a blow just before striking the adversary surely has exerted influence
on the energetic concentration of movement with which he executes his
painting.
Matsuyama has determination and does not hesitate in the face of uncertainty
and he has always chosen to move forward. His success is also due to this
boldness which has fascinated many people in Italy. He has found a fertile
environment and he says, “In Japan, one always makes comparisons
with others, but here it is important to be unique, yourself, and that’s
all.” For him, Italy is the land of people who try and mature with
time, and with work. It is the land of “positive” people.

|