Ryoko Aoki: Kodama.
Matsui, Midori
Ryoko Aoki exemplifies the tendency among younger Japanese artists
to invent an idiosyncratic visual vocabulary by transforming everyday
objects and exploring the work of perception through simple childlike
actions. Aoki's main medium is drawing. She accumulates fragments
of images from sources such as advertisements, children's
encyclopedias, and fabric designs, creating unique pictures in which
far-fetched things are connected through the metonymical associations
that condense or displace details. Her neutral lines encourage these
associative links: Long trajectories trace contours and connect items
from different realms of experience, while repeated, short, tremulous lines conjure up diverse images unified by the use of repeated folding
patterns. In the past, Aoki has shown drawings that connect diverse
phenomena through formal analogy, as when, in Crappy Sight, 2002, a rain
cloud, the pond on which the rain falls, and meandering paths are shown
as aspects of an underlying pattern of winding lines; in another work,
rocky mountains and rippling lakes change places, and a landscape
dissolves into a mental map with fingerprint-like swirls evoking braided hair (The Rope, 2002). When she integrates numerous drawings into a wall
installation, Aoki creates a plane of affective influences, in which
formal or gestural analogies connect the most unlikely things: In
Cross-Sight Puzzle, 2005, presented that year at Hammer Projects at the
UCLA Hammer Museum, flower links were combined with chains of human
bones, their resemblance indicated through the curved lines that
describe both.
In Aoki's more recent drawings, such as those in the
exhibition at Kodama, scattered visions were repeatedly pursued through
the rearrangement of such banal motifs as cookies and flowery fabric
patterns. The random blacking-in of areas between small details
compounded into masses of entangled images created a flickering optical
effect, indicating the dissolution of rational boundaries in a chaotic
flow of thought and shifting intensities of sensations. In her
exhibition in Osaka, "Under the Secret," Aoki pursued an
increased fragmentation of the image through the repeated employment of
broken lines and dots that loosely form indefinite but suggestive
patterns. In #14, 2007, a crumpled Kleenex is presented as the map of an
island in which mountains and paths evolve out of numerous folds. In
#112 and #119, both 2007, charts of embroidery patterns with gridlike
frames are exploited to emphasize the whimsical flight of thought
against mechanical patterns, as the grid's lines branch out to show
small dangling objects. The works are like pieces of electronic music in
which the basic sound structure gradually changes as it is repeated with
variations. The recurrent images of children, animals, and plants, which
gave Aoki's earlier works a sense of the pastoral, were
recapitulated here, but conveyed by flat lines that emphasize their
tracing from source images. Their outlines are nevertheless connected
without a break, implying a growth of images from a single thought.
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Aoki's work powerfully reveals the ability of drawing to
convey the process of association. While encouraging an abstract
reflection on her method of image formation, her drawings capture
glimpses of an internal mythology. Presenting skeletal outlines that
connect children with bones, or dots evoking fractured tips of ice that
constitute a cosmic vision of evolving cities, she describes a cycle of
life, the perpetual process of decomposition and reconstitution. At the
same time, accompanied as they are by documentation in the form of bits
of random conversation found on the Internet and in other media,
casually jotted on separate sheets, her drawings as a whole make up a
flexible network of relations; we are invited to recognize the hidden
patterns connecting things on all levels, without a governing principle.