EXHIBITION Kyobashi

Noritaka Tatehana Obsession

Exhibition

Noritaka Tatehana “Obsession”

Dates

October 11 – November 29, 2025

Opening reception

October 11, at 5 pm – 7 pm

Hours

11 am – 7 pm
Closed on Sun, Mon and National Holidays

Location

KOSAKU KANECHIKA
TODA BUILDING 3F
1-7-1 Kyobashi
Chuo-ku
Tokyo
104-0031
+81(0)3-3528-6720
kosakukanechika.com

Free admission

Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025
Installation view from Obsession at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, 2025

KOSAKU KANECHIKA is pleased to announce two solo exhibitions by Noritaka Tatehana, “Sacred Reflections” at our Tennoz gallery from October 4 to November 22, 2025, and “Obsession” at our Kyobashi gallery from October 11 to November 29, 2025.

The two simultaneous solo exhibitions have contrasting characteristics. One embodies the prolific work of NORITAKA TATEHANA STUDIO, which the artist established the year he graduated from university based on a studio approach, focusing on the theme of reconstructing Japanese culture. The other exhibition showcases works rooted in Tatehana’s personal memories and interests.

The “Sacred Reflections” show at the Tennoz gallery features works with waka (traditional Japanese poetry) and mirror motifs with the theme of cultural inheritance. Waka poetry has been passed down since ancient times by being transcribed as it was composed. For this exhibition, Tatehana himself transcribed waka poems selected from the historical poetry anthology Kokin Wakashū, writing with his own brush. By doing so, the beauty and spirituality of the Japanese language is expressed, and the meaning of inheritance is reflected in his works. The mirror motif, applied as the support of the artwork, reflects cultural memories and suggests that the viewers themselves play a part in this inheritance through their interaction with the artworks.

Tatehana has provided the following statement about “Sacred Reflections.”
 
Mirrors become vessels for memory, with poetic musings silently engraved upon them across time. Through the act of transcription, past cultures begin to speak anew, revealing how traditions are not static, but are passed down through repetition.

By being reflected onto a support resembling a mirror, Kokin Wakashū, an emblem of traditional Japanese culture, is reexamined from a different perspective, rather than simply passing on tradition. While mirrors have traditionally been devices for seeing one’s own reflection, through this artwork, they become tools that encourage dialogue between oneself and culture. This re-evaluation of cultural memories within oneself is what the practice of Rethink is all about.
 
Meanwhile, in contrast to the creations produced with others at his studio, Tatehana’s show “Obsession” in Kyobashi only features original paintings created by the artist alone. By returning to the most primitive method of engaging with art after a fifteen-year career since graduating from university, Tatehana is providing an opportunity to reexamine the path he has taken and the origins of his practice.

While the studio-based creations of “Sacred Reflections” focus on the inheritance of culture and tradition, “Obsession” conveys the artist’s trajectory and spirituality from a contrasting perspective with works that deal with Tatehana’s inner self and personal memories.

Tatehana has provided the following statement about “Obsession.”
  
My practice has expanded far more than I ever imagined, taking on social significance and meaning that transcend the individual. However, there have also been many moments when I felt as though I was losing sight of my personal values and aesthetics. During those times, I sensed that the only way to maintain a balanced psyche as an artist was to get in touch with myself and create works with my own hands.

The lines and colors drawn from my brush express the fluctuations of my thoughts and emotions, my conflicts, my doubts, and a glimmer of joy. The act of painting itself is a dialogue between past and present, my inner self and the outside world, which helps me to visualize the memories and sensations deep within my heart.
 
These shows are an ambitious attempt to delve deeply into the artist’s inner self, as well as the expanse of time and space, and connect his explorations spanning multiple dimensions. We cordially invite you to attend Noritaka Tatehana’s solo exhibitions “Sacred Reflections” and “Obsession” at KOSAKU KANECHIKA, presenting 15 works at the Tennoz gallery and 10 works at the Kyobashi gallery, respectively.


Noritaka Tatehana

Noritaka Tatehana was born in Tokyo, Japan in 1985. His family ran a public bathhouse called “Kabuki-yu” in Kabuki-cho, Tokyo, while he grew up in Kamakura. As a small child and under the guidance of his mother, a doll artist who practices the Waldorf education method, the artist learned to create with his own hands. Tatehana graduated in 2010 from the Department of Crafts at Tokyo University of the Arts, specializing in textile arts. While researching the culture associated with traditional Japanese courtesans, the artist created geta (traditional wooden clogs) and kimonos with yūzen, a traditional Japanese dyeing technique. Tatehana has presented his work in exhibitions such as “Future Beauty: 30 Years of Japanese Fashion” (The Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, 2012), “Image Makers” (21_21 DESIGN SIGHT, Tokyo, 2014), and “Contemporary Japanese Crafts” (touring exhibition in Tokyo, Miyazaki, Kyoto, and Nagoya, 2020–22). He has also held various solo exhibitions which include “NORITAKA TATEHANA: Aesthetics of Magic” (Taro Okamoto Memorial Museum, Tokyo, 2016), “It’s always the others who die” (POLA Museum Annex, Tokyo, 2019), “NORITAKA TATEHANA: Refashioning Beauty” (Portland Japanese Garden, 2019), and “Distance” (Hagi Uragami Museum, Yamaguchi, 2023), amongst others held in New York, Paris, and Belgium. Tatehana has also worked on a wide range of projects, including producing a bunraku performance in 2016 at the Cartier Foundation for Contemporary Arts in Paris. His works have been acquired by internationally acclaimed institutions such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Victoria & Albert Museum in London. He is currently participating in the exhibition “GO FOR KOGEI The Attributes of Kogei: How Can We Reframe Craft?” held in Toyama and Kanazawa until October 19th.

WORKS

Noritaka Tatehana
Self-Portrait
2025

Noritaka Tatehana
Self-Portrait
2025

Oil on canvas
162.3 x 130.2 cm
© 2025 NORITAKA TATEHANA K.K.

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Noritaka Tatehana
Self-Portrait
2025

Noritaka Tatehana
Self-Portrait
2025

Oil on canvas
53.0 x 45.5 cm
© 2025 NORITAKA TATEHANA K.K.

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Noritaka Tatehana
Portrait (Blue Period)
2025

Noritaka Tatehana
Portrait (Blue Period)
2025

Oil on canvas
162.0 x 130.0 cm
© 2025 NORITAKA TATEHANA K.K.

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Noritaka Tatehana
Mother and Child
2025

Noritaka Tatehana
Mother and Child
2025

Pastel on canvas
162.3 x 130.2 cm
© 2025 NORITAKA TATEHANA K.K.

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Noritaka Tatehana
Blue in Red
2025

Noritaka Tatehana
Blue in Red
2025

Oil on canvas
91.0 x 72.6 cm
© 2025 NORITAKA TATEHANA K.K.

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Noritaka Tatehana
Bed head
2025

Noritaka Tatehana
Bed head
2025

Oil on canvas
116.7 x 91.0 cm
© 2025 NORITAKA TATEHANA K.K.

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Noritaka Tatehana
Study for Bed head
2025

Noritaka Tatehana
Study for Bed head
2025

Charcoal on canvas
91.2 x 72.6 cm
© 2025 NORITAKA TATEHANA K.K.

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Noritaka Tatehana
Portrait in Profile
2025

Noritaka Tatehana
Portrait in Profile
2025

Pastel on canvas
53.0 x 45.5 cm
© 2025 NORITAKA TATEHANA K.K.

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Noritaka Tatehana
Woman with Earrings
2025

Noritaka Tatehana
Woman with Earrings
2025

Oil on canvas
116.8 x 91.0 cm
© 2025 NORITAKA TATEHANA K.K.

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Noritaka Tatehana
Falling Camellia
2025

Noritaka Tatehana
Falling Camellia
2025

Oil on canvas
53.0 x 45.5 cm
© 2025 NORITAKA TATEHANA K.K.

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