2525 Michigan Ave. #A6
Marshall Gallery presents
An Introduction to Shadows, an evocative group exhibition that brings together a diverse selection of photographs made in Japan over the past twenty-five years, showcasing both celebrated masters and innovative emerging voices. The presentation unfolds with a quiet intensity, echoing Tanizaki’s belief that what is only partially revealed can leave the strongest impression. Here, subtlety becomes a kind of illumination, guiding viewers through a world shaped by restraint, atmosphere, and a profound sensitivity to the passage of time.
The exhibition gathers the work of Kenji Aoki, Chieko Shiraishi,
Miho Kajioka,
Masao Yamamoto, Mika Horie,
Toshio Shibata, Masahisa Fukase,
Kenro Izu,
Daido Moriyama, and Kensuke Koike. Across these artists, a shared spirit emerges—one that embraces minimalism, tactile beauty, and a muted visual language. Aoki’s meticulously arranged studio compositions reveal a disciplined elegance, while Koike’s inventive collages bend and reimagine photographic form. Kajioka and Yamamoto offer poetic fragments of memory, their small prints carrying the weight of dreams. Shiraishi’s shadow-filled images from the series
Shimakage, shown in the United States for the first time, envelop the viewer in a world defined as much by what is unseen as by what is shown.
Adding a vibrant counterpoint, Mika Horie’s cyanotypes—printed on handmade gampi paper—pulse with color and texture, while Kenro Izu’s celebrated
Blue Nudes extend a lineage of contemplative beauty. Shibata’s stark studies of infrastructure highlight the interplay of nature and human intervention. From an earlier generation, works by Fukase and Moriyama remind viewers of the radical experimentation that shaped modern Japanese photography.
Inspired by a recent journey to Japan, the exhibition reflects a renewed appreciation for the country’s deep photographic heritage. By presenting rarely seen works and intimate objects, Marshall Gallery invites visitors to engage with Japan’s distinct visual sensibility and to discover the quietly resonant approaches that continue to define its photographic landscape.
Image:
Kenji Aoki Japan, b. 1968
Civilizational Collapse No. 1, 2020
Toned Gelatin Silver Print
20 x 16 in.
Edition of 10 © Kenji Aoki