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Kelly Akashi: Faultline, 2245 E Washington Blvd., Los Angeles,

November 5 - December 4, 2021
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Kelly Akashi: Faultline

Past exhibition
November 5 - December 4, 2021 2245 E Washington Blvd., Los Angeles
  • Press Release
  • Installation Views
  • Works
  • Press
Press Release
Kelly Akashi Witness, 2021 Lost-wax cast bronze 7 x 57 x 23 inches 18 x 145 x 58.5 cm.
Kelly Akashi
Witness, 2021
Lost-wax cast bronze
7 x 57 x 23 inches
18 x 145 x 58.5 cm.

François Ghebaly is proud to present Kelly Akashi’s third solo exhibition with the gallery: Faultline. The exhibition tracks the continual evolution of Akashi’s practice as she incorporates new photographic and craft traditions into her expansive practice.  

Originally trained in photography, Akashi’s approach to sculpture consistently shows how materials can capture and render not only time, but emotional experience, interiority, and memory. She frequently uses cast bronze, blown glass, melting wax, and other materials that encode the passage of a moment. In Faultline, these materials are joined by new additions to her repertoire: carved stone, polished aluminum, and heirloom jewelry worn, loved, and gifted by her and her family. Taken together, the works pose biological and geological materials within a symbolic space of mind and memory.

The exhibition opens with a series of new crystalline photographs, produced through chemical processes of growth and fixity. Akashi grew crystals onto photographic film, then developed them using chemical techniques like silver gelatine, cibachrome, or chromogenic processing, capturing their quasibiotic structures in luminous images that she calls crystallographs. Akashi pairs these works with a gleaming column of polished aluminum, lying prone the length of her body and formed to a visualization of her pulse. Biometrics made physical, the work introduces the idea of the body segmented and diffused into inorganic materials, a dynamic also at play in Akashi’s cast hand sculptures. One is suspended in the next hallway, holding aloft an intricate sphere of flame-worked glass, sprouting vines and blossoms from within. 

The sparse second gallery of the exhibition contains a single sculpture, a monument depicting the artist’s body carved into streaked marble. In this work as in others in her recent practice, Akashi draws on the Japanese notion of mono no aware, a gentle sensitivity to the state of impermanence and transience that underlies all things. Akashi heightens this attentiveness to ephemerality by showering the room with flower petals, which desiccate and decay over the course of the exhibition. The colorful scatter suggests a carnival or celebration as much as an untended memorial, emphasizing a sense of aftermath. 

Entering the final room of the exhibition one is greeted first by the scent of earth. Four massive earthen forms support an array of new sculptures in a diverse range of materials, from cast crystal and carved stone to flameworked glass and heirloom jewelry. These works divulge a personal past in multiple ways. The heirloom objects speak to intergenerational passage and stand in for lineage and the delivery of familial knowledge. More directly to Akashi’s family story are materials that originated in Poston, Arizona, the site of one of the largest internment camps for Japanese Americans during the 1940s. This was the site of the Akashi family’s internment. The artist brought physical remnants from the site, including stones, fallen tree branches, and tumbleweeds, which she integrates into a number of sculptures in the exhibition. Throughout the exhibition, these works explore the sedimentation of experience and the layering of passing moments, passing lifetimes, and passing generations. 

Kelly Akashi (b. 1983, Los Angeles) lives and works in Los Angeles. Her works are held in the permanent collections of Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Hammer Museum; and the Brooklyn Museum, among others. She has exhibited in solo exhibitions with Tanya Bonakdar, New York; ARCH, Athens; and SculptureCenter, New York; as well as in numerous group exhibitions including at Clark Art Institute; White Cube; Palm Springs Art Museum; the Jewish Museum; and David Roberts Art Foundation, among others. Next year she will present her first institutional solo exhibition in California at the San Jose Museum of Art, curated by Lauren Dickens. Faultline is her third solo exhibition with François Ghebaly.

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Installation Views
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Akashi Ghebaly 2021 A
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Akashi Ghebaly 2021 C
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Akashi Ghebaly 2021 E
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Akashi Ghebaly 2021 F
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Akashi Ghebaly 2021 I
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Akashi Ghebaly 2021 F
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Akashi Ghebaly 2021 B
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Akashi Ghebaly 2021 L
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Akashi Ghebaly 2021 M
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Akashi Ghebaly 2021 N
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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Akashi Ghebaly 2021 Ze
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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Akashi Ghebaly 2021 Zb
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Akashi Ghebaly 2021 V
Works
  • Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Formation, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Six Beats of My Heart at the Scale of My Body, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Six Beats of My Heart at the Scale of My Body, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Long Exposure, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Long Exposure, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Witness, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Witness, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Witness, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Witness, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Witness, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Witness, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Wedged Life Forms, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Wedged Life Forms, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Stratum, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Stratum, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Spawn, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Spawn, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Life Forms in Equilibrium, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Life Forms in Equilibrium, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Inheritance, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Inheritance, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Hybrid Life Forms, 2019-2021
    Kelly Akashi, Hybrid Life Forms, 2019-2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Heirloom, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Heirloom, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Fruiting Life Forms, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Fruiting Life Forms, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Cultivator (Fruiting Whorl), 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Cultivator (Fruiting Whorl), 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Cultivator (Cavern), 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Cultivator (Cavern), 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Crest, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Crest, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Conjoined Weeds, 2020-2021
    Kelly Akashi, Conjoined Weeds, 2020-2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Bloom, 2021
    Kelly Akashi, Bloom, 2021
  • Kelly Akashi, Be Me, 2020-2021
    Kelly Akashi, Be Me, 2020-2021
Press
  • Kelly Akashi's Circle of Life Connects Body to Cosmos

    Nicholas Nauman, Ocula, November 17, 2021
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