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FOOT PAINTING at Point B (2013) Painting by Hamu Isen
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These traces may clearly retain the imprint of the foot, or remain ambiguous and blurred. Rather than presenting the body itself, I reveal its presence obliquely through the use of its residual marks. This structure resonates with my other series, such as Eyes in Loops, where motifs like ribbons, mouths, and shadows operate within the threshold between visibility and concealment.
"FOOT PAINTING" also acts as a trace of time. In the moment when the foot touches the surface—when pressure is applied, the body shifts, and pigment seeps into the material—a singular, unrepeatable event occurs. The motion halts, and the trace becomes a record of time. Through these gestures, I seek to make visible the way the body encounters and leaves behind time itself.
The process is not one of vigorous movement but of controlled arrangement. I avoid twisting or leaping, instead maintaining a calm, balanced step. At the root of this lies a practical embodiment of an Eastern attitude toward the body: the idea that only a composed body, one that is internally aligned and externally open, can most sensitively engage with the world. Rather than acting from willful assertion, the body places points of through minimal movement—a form of quiet communion with chaos, a kind of ritual or ageway.
This series also incorporates textual signs, such as cocktail recipes or the names of planets. These characters do not function to communicate meaning, but instead serve as spatial-temporal noise, accompanying the traces and adding an unsettling rhythm or order to the space.
While "FOOT PAINTING" remains a temporary format, it acts—like Hidden Gesture and Eyes in Loops—as a medium that traverses themes of consciousness and the unconscious, body and sign, chaos and structure, and time itself. I borrow forms and layer their traces in order to tentatively shape a quiet mode of being.
Related themes
I am an artist who works with signs as my material. Motifs such as soles of the feet, shoe shapes, ribbons, and language appear repeatedly in my work, functioning as "signs" embedded within layers of personal memory and cultural sediment. Among them, footprints hold a particularly significant position—not merely as bodily traces, but as signs that embody actions, time, and meaning. They carry information such as “who,” “how,” and “in which direction” someone existed, serving as symbols that evoke culture, memory, and narrative. I treat them as sign-based points of that visualize the invisible.
My interest lies in the process through which signs become present via bodily acts, connect with materiality, and are restructured as meaning. For example, the act of writing letters with the trace of a foot reconstructs abstract language into something material and improvised—a “point of ” where meaning blurs and begins to sprout anew. In works like the shoe shaped sculpture and parts of the Hidden Gesture series, I often use grid paper to plan forms prior to production, basing compositions on balanced ratios such as 5×7 (silver ratio) and 5×8 (golden ratio). Rather than relying solely on physical gestures, I aim for a coexistence of chance and structure by grounding my work in invisible orders.
For me, signs are not static entities but living structures within movement and relationships. Motifs such as shoe shapes or ribbons are not mere symbols; they function as devices that mediate between body and society, self and collective, past and future. My practice is a conceptual endeavor that explores the in-between of visible and invisible, thought and sensation, chaos and order through signs. Rather than reconciling opposing forces such as East and West, my work dwells within their tension.
The forms that appear in my work are never ends in themselves—they are always temporary borrowings used to mediate the questions that arise within me. Figurative and abstract, painting and sculpture, bodily traces and symbolic ribbons—all are chosen for their mediating potential and eventually recede. I create at the intersection of intuition and concept. My selection of forms and gestures is neither dictated solely by intellect, nor overwhelmed by sensation. Rather, I aim to remain within a state of "mediation" in all such acts.
- Nationality: JAPAN
- Date of birth : 1982
- Artistic domains: Works by professional artists,
- Groups: Contemporary Japanese Artists
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