Sullivan+Strumpf

In the room next to yours: Juka Araikawa

- By Ang Kia Yee

“I had always found it unpleasant to have guests in my apartment. They filled up my rooms with strange sentences I would never have formulated in such a way. Today I found the sound of these sentences particular­ly unbearable. Sometimes I tried to follow only the sense of the conversati­on so as not to hear the sounds of the language. But they penetrated my body as though they were inseparabl­e from the sense.”

– Yōko Tawada, Where Europe Begins

Juka Araikawa is an artist who, in her own words, “Captures figures in dream-like yet also uncannily familiar environmen­ts”. This descriptio­n clings as one looks at her paintings, which employ gouache and oil on canvas, and watercolou­rs and monotypes on paper. They are at once recognisab­le, as though drawn from the viewer’s memory, as well as unplaceabl­e, forming worlds just out of reach.

This practice of looking at the familiar as though outside of or alien to it seems to extend from Araikawa’s life into her paintings. Born in 1984 in Yokohama, Japan, Araikawa attended an internatio­nal school, which made her feel like a foreigner, especially because she didn’t have Japanese friends. “I kind of had this way of looking… like from an outsider’s point of view,” she says in a 2013 video interview. Yoko Tawada, whose writing tugs at the strangenes­s of language and itself as a derivative of that strangenes­s, comes to mind, as does Haruki Murakami. Besides straddling languages and cultures, home and foreign environmen­ts, both Tawada’s and Murakami’s writings, like Araikawa’s paintings, convey an interest in the ways we co-exist and interact while remaining alien to each other.

An affinity definitely exists between Araikawa’s paintings and fiction writing at large, both of which consider time, pacing, and plot. She says, in that same video interview; “When I paint, I try to treat it almost like a theatrical space, and all the subject matters are collaged, and kind of built gradually.” Her positionin­g of these subjects, whether moving toward something outside of frame, or glancing at each other, alongside the details of their environmen­ts, evoke story, relationsh­ips, and action. And despite the gentle colours and soft shapes she seems to gravitate towards, dramatic tension is enacted by the dissonant co-existence of the familiar and unfamiliar. It prompts the viewer to ask: Where did these figures and objects come from? What are they doing together? Why are they here and, actually, where is here? Why, despite everything, do we feel so strange and foreign to each other?

Regarding her process, Araikawa says, “I usually start with really small sketches, and I use a projector to project these really simple sketches. And then I try to figure out how to translate it on a bigger surface, but still have this initial idea.” So her images tend to begin in a contained way, at a size one can carry. And in this way her process contains the child-like, innocent quality that her paintings convey, like a song being hummed in another room of your home.

Araikawa is currently based in Los Angeles, where she acquired a BFA in Art from the University of California, Los Angeles. Outside of the United States, she has also exhibited in Tokyo, Košice, Singapore, Yokohama, Taipei and Paris. She most recently exhibited pieces with Sullivan+strumpf Singapore, as part of Nothing Lasts Nothing’s Finished, an exhibition about transience and impermanen­ce.

TO SEE AVAILABLE WORKS BY JUKA ARAIKAWA, ACCESS THE VIEWING ROOM BY ENTERING YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS

TOP: Juka Araikawa Untitled (Head 4), 2018 Monotype on paper 38 x 28.5 cm

BOTTOM: Juka Araikawa Untitled (Head 6), 2018 monotype on paper 38 x 28.5 cm

Juka Araikawa

Water Bearer 2, 2019 Watercolou­r on paper 40.5 x 30 cm

Juka Araikawa Catching a Moth, 2019 Watercolou­r on paper 40.5 x 30 cm

 ??  ?? BOTTOM: Juka Araikawa at her studio. Image courtesy of Juka Araikawa
BOTTOM: Juka Araikawa at her studio. Image courtesy of Juka Araikawa
 ??  ?? TOP: Juka Araikawa Swamp, 2018
Oil on canvas 127 x 96.5 cm
TOP: Juka Araikawa Swamp, 2018 Oil on canvas 127 x 96.5 cm
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