Yumiko Utsu

 Yumiko Utsu - Pineowl

Pineowl
© Yumiko Utsu courtesy Michael Hoppen Hoppen Contemporary

Yumiko Utsu

C-type print on Kodak Endura Paper. Edition of 7

56x46cm

 Yumiko Utsu - Octopus Portrait  Yumiko Utsu - Squid Mask  Yumiko Utsu - Octopus eye cat  Yumiko Utsu - Pineowl  Yumiko Utsu - Sea cucumber sofa  Yumiko Utsu - Shiitake mashroom  Yumiko Utsu - Squilla girl  Yumiko Utsu - Rensaku tomato

If the proto-surrealist painter Arcimboldo had been a sushi chef, his creations might have looked something like Yumiko Utsu’s deliciously unsettling images. This summer over thirty of the Japanese photographer’s works will be on display at Michael Hoppen Gallery for her first solo exhibition in the UK.

Combining the intricate techniques of food photography with the anthropomorphic tendencies of manga, Utsu has an affinity for kitsch shared by British photographer Martin Parr. But instead of taking a strictly documentary approach to the Japanese relationship with food and the natural world, she uses fruit, vegetables, and seafood to construct surreal fantasies populated by kittens with octopus eyes, pineapples full of owls, and phallic carrots. Several contemporary Japanese artists – perhaps the most famous of whom is Takashi Murakami – reference manga, with its wide-eyed cartoon characters and anthropomorphized objects, in order to subvert modern Japanese culture. But by using the visceral, perishable products of nature to reinvent such imagery Utsu goes further, undermining the antiseptic values of the genre, pricking its glossy surface with a shudder of amused repulsion. By exposing the strangeness of manga’s visual strategies she also reveals our complex relationship to the natural world and to our own bodies – at once sensual and comic, tinged by eroticism, disgust, and desire.

Utsu has stated that her favourite artist is Czech animator Jan Švankmajer, whose surrealist short film Food (1992) revels in the disturbing, humorous, and erotic responses we have to the culinary arts. Likewise, Utsu’s photographic series suggest stills from an animated film, and portray similarly comic but unsettling scenarios: a puppy in a volcanic landscape seems to erupt in a fountain of chocolate; a head of Romanesco broccoli is transformed into an alpine landscape; and a wide-eyed tomato gradually decomposes into a pulpy mass. By extracting individual moments from these imagined situations Utsu allows us to luxuriate in the pure visual pleasure of her creations, while giving us time to reflect on the significance of her surreal humour. As William Burroughs said when explaining the name of his famous novel: “The title means exactly what the words say: naked lunch, a frozen moment when everyone sees what is on the end of every fork”.

Yumiko Utsu was born in Tokyo in 1978. She has had solo exhibitions in Japan and Hungary and her work has been collected by Charles Saatchi. This extensive exhibition at Michael Hoppen Gallery demonstrates both the consistency of Utsu’s creative vision and the rich variety of her imagination. Images of naive innocence, scatological humour and frank sexuality make this introduction to Utsu’s world a disturbingly seductive experience.


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