Opening:
  Thursday, February 8th, 6 - 8 pm
 

P·P·O·W is delighted to announce Oscar Oiwa’s forthcoming exhibition Fire Shop.  After international solo exhibits in Tokyo, Paris, and São Paulo, this will be Oscar Oiwa’s first one person exhibition in New York. 

Oscar Oiwa is a Brazilian artist of Japanese descent.  Born of immigrant parents in Brazil and then living as an artist in Tokyo, London, and currently in New York, he has become, in a sense, a global refugee who has experienced and learned to see the world as a whole.  Whether Oiwa’s paintings are inspired by the Tokyo fish market, the New York stock exchange, or the trinket street vendors in downtown São Paulo, his large multi-paneled oil paintings of landscapes reflect the social conscience of an omnipresent global economy.
   
Oiwa paints in a style that is loose with a certain flare of cartoon pop infused with a dark atmosphere of an impending apocalypse.  His use of contrast also affects the reading of the painting, whether it is through color, image or sentiment; each painting feels as if it is a psychological backdrop to a noir film. Like watching a disaster on television, Oiwa warmly invites us to gaze into the overpowering situations that he paints.

Inspired by current events, each painting reflects upon the aftermath of cause-and-effect political policies gone awry.  Oiwa fills his film screen-sized canvases with looming war and impending destruction amongst carefully placed puffs and fields of color.  For instance, the painting entitled Fire Shop is a vision of American occupation in the Middle East as well as the psychological specter of the Middle East in Middle America. Red cotton candy-like cluster bombs stretch through the middle of the canvas and connect a group of parked Humvees to a fireworks shop set up like some roadside shack along I-95. One could recognize the twisted skeleton of the world trade center deep in the middle of the canvas and use the NYC call box to phone in case of emergency.  In Penguin, the slow collapse of our environment through global warming is at issue.  Oiwa paints an architectural labyrinth of an artic ice shelf.  As it slowly melts into the sea, penguins stand motionless as their home is on the brink of disaster.

Oscar Oiwa currently lives and works in New York City.  He has received both The Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant as well as the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Award.  Running concurrently at ASU Art Museum is Oscar Oiwa’s exhibition Gardening with Oscar Oiwa: New Paintings.  A color catalogue is available. His work has been collected by numerous museums around the world.

 

Please call 212-647-1044 for additional information or for photographic materials.


Above: Fire Shop, 2005, oil on canvas, 90 x 270 inches