振動 ((Shindō))

Duration

June 21, 2025 -
July 5, 2025

Opening Times

Tuesday - Friday, 1:00 - 7:00 PM
Saturday, 11:00 AM - 7:00 PM
Sunday - Monday, Closed.

Opening Party

June 20, 2025 - 07:00PM

At the heart of the unseen, where waves propagate and whisper stories, the exhibition 振動 ((Shindō)) weaves a fascinating encounter between two artistic sensibilities: that of Japan's Yusuke Kuriki and France's Vincent Ruffin.

Through their works, vibration reveals itself in its many facets: an imperceptible breath, a palpable energy, a distant echo. Allow yourself to be carried away by this vibrant dialogue, where materials, forms, shapes, and colours resonate revealing the beauty and power of movement, whether physical or spiritual. “Art does not reproduce the visible; it makes visible.” (Paul Klee). It is in this ability to make the invisible perceptible that the authenticity of the artistic gesture resides.

Yusuke Kuriki

Yusuke Kuriki's art delves into the complexity of human identity, merging projected images with true selves through a playful combination of visual vocabularies. His surreal compositions, inspired by Carl Jung, explore the inner world and are instantly recognizable for their colorful exuberance. Kuriki's meticulous treatment of the figure reveals a hidden mystical aspect, inviting viewers to discover a universe where the visible and invisible meet. Drawing from myths, religions, and art history, he creates a timeless, dreamlike world where legend takes shape and apparitions arise. His work dislocates the senses, pulling viewers into an imaginative realm to confront deeper meanings hidden beneath the surface.

Vincent Ruffin

La Rochelle artist Vincent Ruffin crafts vibrant, multi-layered paintings that blend art history and cultural observation into ambiguous, questioning narratives. He uses color symbolically to explore subconscious divides, and his magical realist works combine contrasting elements, injecting a vibrant pulse into the mundane. Inspired by philosophy and literature, Ruffin's art serves as a platform for social critique and philosophical ponderings on the oscillating nature of reality, making the unseen visible through subtle painted interactions.