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HIKARI SHIMODA 'Imagine a Person' Giglée Print
HIKARI SHIMODA 'Imagine a Person' Giglée Print
HIKARI SHIMODA 'Imagine a Person' Giglée Print
HIKARI SHIMODA 'Imagine a Person' Giglée Print
HIKARI SHIMODA 'Imagine a Person' Giglée Print
HIKARI SHIMODA 'Imagine a Person' Giglée Print
HIKARI SHIMODA 'Imagine a Person' Giglée Print
HIKARI SHIMODA 'Imagine a Person' Giglée Print
HIKARI SHIMODA 'Imagine a Person' Giglée Print
HIKARI SHIMODA 'Imagine a Person' Giglée Print
HIKARI SHIMODA 'Imagine a Person' Giglée Print - Signari Gallery
HIKARI SHIMODA 'Imagine a Person' Giglée Print - Signari Gallery
HIKARI SHIMODA 'Imagine a Person' Giglée Print - Signari Gallery

HIKARI SHIMODA 'Imagine a Person' (2022) Giglée Print

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$950.00
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$950.00
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'Imagine a Person' by Hikari Shimoda, 2022
From the artist's solo show 'Fight to Live in the Void', June-July, CHG Gallery, Los Angeles, CA.
30 x 24 Inches
76.2 x 61 Centimeters
Giclée print on 290gsm Moab Entrada fine art paper.
Limited Edition of 150 (#8/150)
Signed and numbered by the artist.

ARTIST BIO

Hikari Shimoda first studied illustration at the prestigious Kyoto Saga University of Art and Aoyama Juku School before beginning her career as a contemporary artist in 2008. Soon afterward, Shimoda was selected for her first solo exhibition at Motto Gallery in Tokyo, and since then has held exhibitions annually in galleries worldwide, spanning Japan, the United States, Canada, and Milano, Italy.

Shimoda’s artwork paints a world where cuteness and horror coexist, and fantasy meets reality. She credits the Japanese pop culture she grew up with as the main source of inspiration of her Lowbrow “Irasuto” style, which means artwork made by people inspired by anime and manga. There are often children putting on heroic costumes such as Superman and “shojo” or magical girls, an anime sub-genre of young girls who use magic.

Through depicting children especially, Shimoda reveals the problems people in today’s society struggle with from within. Children possess a simple existence because their identity is ambiguous which provides her with an original point of view. In her “Whereabouts of God” portrait series of other-worldly horned children, she also comments on Christianity’s anointment of Jesus Christ as savior of humanity and mirror of our fantasy heroes. These characters not only represent heroism but an adult desire to watch our children grow and defend the world we have constructed. With each new piece, Shimoda advances her search for salvation and her deeper understanding of this chaotic world.