Art of Japan

Art of Japan

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 31. Honda Takeshi (b. 1958)  Walking in the Mountains – August (Yama aruki – hachigatsu) | 1993.

Property from an Important Private Collection

Honda Takeshi (b. 1958) Walking in the Mountains – August (Yama aruki – hachigatsu) | 1993

Estimate

40,000 - 50,000 GBP

We may charge or debit your saved payment method subject to the terms set out in our Conditions of Business for Buyers.

Read more.

Lot Details

Description

Property from an Important Private Collection

Honda Takeshi (b. 1958)

Walking in the Mountains – August (Yama aruki – hachigatsu)


charcoal on paper, mounted on board in two separate panels, signed, titled and dated to the reverse, executed in 1993


227.3 x 363.6 cm., 89½ x 143⅛ in.

MEM Gallery, Tokyo

Masakatsu Ohno et al., Higashijima Tsuyoshi and Honda Takeshi (Iwate, 2013), p. 62-63.

Iwate Museum of Art, Japan, Higashijima Tsuyoshi and Honda Takeshi, 16 November 2013 - 16 February 2014.

Honda’s process involves the use of black and white photographs as a basis for his charcoal drawings. After photographing his subject, Honda draws fine lines over it as it were graph paper. A magnified version of this stencil is pasted onto a panel that he will complete his final drawing, painstakingly depicting each square from the photograph and meticulously matching it onto the enlarged grid.


In his work, Honda attempts both practically and visually to negate the self. He removes himself from the subject by not painting in situ, creating landscapes akin to carbonised fossils as if excavated by the viewer. His subjects are places that are relatable anywhere in the Japanese mountain countryside, a conscious decision to conceal his presence in order to capture the very existence of the object depicted. His process at times takes several months to a year to complete.


Honda was born in 1958 in Nagato City, Yamaguchi Prefecture. In 1987, he moved to the surrounding mountains of Tono, Iwate Prefecture. His works have been exhibited domestically and internationally, including the Iwate Museum of Art, Contemporary Art Museum, Kumamoto, Minneapolis Institute of Arts, and The Drawing Center (New York).