Olympia is pleased to present Tori Tori Tori, a solo presentation of works on paper by Kako Ueda. Painted and drawn, with paper cut-outs layered and composited towards sculptural effect, Ueda’s hybrid process echoes the chimeric collaging taking place among the animals in the show. Exhibiting imaginary beings up to her recent engagement with the movement and flight of birds, Tori Tori Tori, is a labyrinth of a mind left to dreaming; holding a mirror up to the theme of migration and the presence of the chimera both literal and symbolic.
While the common use of the word migration is for the seasonal movement of animals from one region to another, a secondary one as meaningful for the works is the movement from one part of something to another. This latter definition drifts into the mythological chimera, who in ancient Greek sources is made up of a lion’s head, a goat’s body, a serpent’s tail, and is fire-breathing. The chimeras of Tori Tori Tori are hybrid beasts that are part animal, flower, insect, or people. They are fantastical whose identities are only partially revealed. In these creatures, a migration is pictured to be taking place within. The edges of their cut-out shapes are thresholds for instinct, pulsing life, and a local wilderness inhabiting or haunting each one.
While the themes of migration and metamorphosis speak to Ueda’s career-long interests – as well as her biography, having left Japan at the age of 15 to move to the US on her own – her recent attention towards birds in particular (tori being Japanese for bird) is also in conversation with the disturbing movements in the modern farming industry. The killing of wild birds is taking place all over the world via the man-made catastrophe of the bird flu; hawks, falcons, owls, ducks, loons, vultures, crows, gulls, wild geese, and countless other species, are falling out of the sky. And while this is happening outside of most people’s purview, the virus requires just enough mutation to be another human nightmare.
More information on the event can be found here.