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Toshio Shibata: Land Abstractions brings more than three decades of work by the Japanese photographer to Gallery Luisotti from June 20 to July 25, 2026. The exhibition centers on a body of images that turns bridges, dams, retaining walls, roadways and irrigation systems into precise compositions, showing how built structures can be read as part of the landscape rather than as interruptions to it.
Toshio Shibata has long been known for photographs that hover between document and abstraction. In both black-and-white and color, his images isolate engineered forms against mountains, water, stone and sky, letting geometry and topography carry the frame. What emerges is not a record of infrastructure in the usual sense, but a sustained look at how human planning reshapes terrain and how terrain, in turn, resists being fully controlled.
The exhibition brings together early works, familiar images and more recent color photographs, giving a clear view of how consistent Shibata’s approach has remained while his palette and subjects expanded. Even when the structures are massive, the photographs avoid drama. Their power comes from balance, scale and patience, with each image holding tension between order and uncertainty. The result is formally exact, but never cold.
Shibata’s work has often been discussed in relation to minimalism and abstract photography, yet it stays firmly tied to real places and practical systems. Roads curve through hillsides, concrete walls cut across water, and drainage works become elegant shapes without losing their function. That combination is central to the exhibition. It shows infrastructure not as background, but as a visible part of how people live inside the environment they alter.
Seen together, the photographs offer a quiet but exact account of coexistence. They reflect a long study of human intervention and natural force, and they give that relationship a visual form that is measured, restrained and clear.
Image:
© Toshio Shibata, courtesy of the artist.