Not currently available for saleThis piece is currently reserved (either by a client or for an exhibition...).Get notified when it becomes available again.
Thank you very much for your interest!
Your message has been sent successfully! We will get back to you if the artwork becomes available again.
Singulart guarantees reliability and traceability.
All the artists on the platform have been specially selected and certify to only sell works, of which they are the artist. Whatever the medium, the work is sent to the buyer with a certificate of authenticity. Photographs are numbered and signed.
Every customer can be given a copy of their certificate of authenticity by contacting support@singulart.com
With Singulart, you can pay safely by credit card or bank transfer.
For all transactions exceeding your credit limit, contact us. We are required to verify every transfer, as part of the fight against fraud and money laundering.
Singulart prices include:
Price of an artwork defined by an artist.
Insurance. Your order is 100% protected in case of any damage or loss.
All customs fees, taxes, and document preparation.
Third-party logistic provider shipping costs.
A dedicated Singulart customer care specialist that will assist you with any questions or problems during shipment.
Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Framing on request.
Dimensions :
27.6x39.4in
About this artwork
Currently reserved for an event in Berlin. [Tokyo]Ways is inspired by the Tokyo subway system, one of the busiest and most intricate in the world. Beyond its physical structure, it embodies the city’s collective unconscious, a shared rhythm of movement, silence, and restraint. Within its crowded tunnels, individuality often dissolves into the flow of millions, yet subtle gestures, unspoken codes, and fleeting connections reveal layers of meaning.…
This work reflects Tokyo’s subway as a mirror of the collective psyche: ordered yet chaotic, impersonal yet deeply human. It invites viewers to step into this collective field and consider how much of our own identity is shaped, and sometimes obscured, by the currents of the many.
As an artist, I am interested in the visible and invisible forces that shape individual and collective experience, particularly how environments, social systems, and belief structures influence perception, behavior, and forms of belonging. My work examines how these forces operate through what is shown and what remains hidden, and how divisions are constructed through fear, prejudice, and exclusion.
I approach my practice as an inquiry into tension: between visibility and concealment, separation and interconnectedness, surface and depth, detail and totality. These tensions guide how I think about images, spaces, and the relationships they establish with the viewer.
Working across painting and mixed media, I experiment with the collision and combination of techniques and materials. Through processes of layering, interruption, and material testing, I explore transformation and shifts across media as ways of questioning how meaning is formed and destabilized.