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Los AngelesMay 11, 2022 • View in browserSoft Scenes of a Rough Life of LaborDaisuke Fukunaga depicts Japanese workers as tired but happy. Are they, really? | Jennifer Remenchik The characters of Daisuke Fukunaga’s Beautiful Work, on view at Nonaka-Hill, occupy a unique and strange liminal space between work and sleep. Throughout the exhibition, Fukunaga keeps a seemingly simple concept — pleasant paintings of workers — remarkably unexpected. In these paintings, the worker appears solitary, and, with a few exceptions, entirely alone on the picture plane. While this setup could easily be depicted as lonely or sad, somehow Fukunaga manages more emotional complexity than that, keeping them in a space more akin to the dreamy. Reveling in the Ruins of the PastIn attempting to convey atrocities that confound language, artist Phyllida Barlow comes up against a paradox with no easy resolution. | Natalie Haddad Otherworldly Beings Hidden in Quotidian Scenes of LAAryo Toh Djojo’s paintings capture the jarring moment of looking at a familiar photograph, only to notice something slightly amiss. | Jeanha Park Become a member today to support our independent journalism. Become a Member |
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