Scroll is pleased to present a two-person exhibition by Lina Tharsing and Miho Ichise.
Photographing scenes of the life around her, Miho Ichise translates these snapshots into drawings before finishing her compositions on canvas. Rather than paint what is directly and physically in front of her, Ichise turns to photography, which she feels gives her a certain freedom to create her world, taking extracts of an image, changing the colors, and adding other elements. Painting is not just a replication of her surroundings, but a sensory and atmospheric translation – an attempt to capture the sight, sound, touch, smell, and feeling around her. Ichise draws inspiration and admiration from the play of light and shadow by Georges de La Tour, the lush and atmospheric scenes of printmaker Hasui Kawase, the refined and minimal compositions of Alex Katz, and the colorful textures of Pierre Bonnard.
The artist states, “I would like my work to be an open door to anyone where they can enter to enjoy a connection to their childhood or small excitement of daily life.” Her intimate paintings crop to subtle and distinct details – an element of a scene – allowing the viewer to imagine the bigger picture beyond the edges of the canvas. Whether depicting family members, friends, or strangers on a street, Ichise always draws from scenes of her life and experience.
Ichise (b. 1969) currently lives and works in Fukuoka, Japan. She received her BA in Fine Art from Chelsea College of Art & Design in London. She has recently exhibited WOAW Gallery, Singapore; Contemporary by U Gallery, Taipei; Marvin Gardens, New York, and Nationale 8 Gallery, Brussels. Her work was included in Scroll NYC’s inaugural exhibition, Chew, in September 2022.
Both intimate and visually transfixing, Lina Tharsing’s paintings are rooted in real places while possessing a dreamlike quality. For Tharsing, nature is a vehicle where she finds moments of transcendence in the ordinary fabric of everyday life. Light plays a major role in Tharsing’s compositions – whether filtering through trees or glimmering across water, light serves as a catalyst, and a reminder to stay curious.
Following the loss of her parents, Tharsing’s work has been shaped by grief, a transformative force that has reframed her perception of the world. Tharsing states, “Grief is a paradoxical experience – a profound journey into sadness, yet also a doorway to nearly overwhelming love and connection. Each of these paintings is a gateway, an entrance, a window, to what I refer to as ‘thin places’ – moments that reveal the veil between the seen and unseen. My paintings are an invitation to contemplate the presence of something beyond ourselves, something ineffable yet persistent, felt, and present. I am more aware than ever of our collective grief about our relationship to this planet, our ecological grief, and the grief associated with war and human suffering. I come back to the invitation of grief which asks us to transform ourselves and to open ourselves towards our connectedness.”
Tharsing (b. 1983) currently lives and works in Lexington, Kentucky. She received her BA in Fine Art from the University of Kentucky. She has exhibited at MARCH Gallery, New York; Institute 1983, Lexington, KY; Venus Over Manhattan, New York; Primary, Miami, and Bolivar Art Gallery at the University of Kentucky. Tharsing’s works were included in Scroll NYC’s group exhibitions Chew and Inside Out.
For more information or visuals please contact info@scroll.nyc