Works Exhibited

About

Over the course of just ten years, Tetsuya Ishida (1973–2005) produced a striking body of work centered on themes of human isolation and alienation. Ishida came of age as an artist during Japan’s “lost decade,” a period of nationwide economic recession that lasted through the 1990s. His paintings capture the feelings of hopelessness, claustrophobia, and emotional isolation that dominated Japanese society during this time, even—or perhaps especially—in the wake of its rapid technological advancement. From his early career until his untimely death in 2005, Ishida conjured vivid allegories of the challenges to Japanese life and morale in paintings and graphic works charged with Kafkaesque absurdity.

Ishida was born in Yaizu, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan. An early encounter with the illustration work of Lithuanian American Social Realist Ben Shahn—specifically his images of the 1954 Lucky Dragon incident, in which Japanese fishermen were exposed to radiation from a nuclear bomb test conducted by the United States military—proved formative to his creative vision. Ishida’s focus on social commentary was established through his participation in a local writing contest, to which he submitted a response to Shahn’s art, and a 1984 human-rights-themed manga competition, which he entered with a comic strip titled Yowaimonoijime wa yameyou! (Stop Bullying Weaklings!), which underscored his concerns about an overdependence on technology.

In 1992, Ishida enrolled at Musashino Art University in Tokyo, earning a degree in Visual Communication Design in 1996. That same year he began exhibiting paintings at galleries in the Ginza district. Between 1996 and 2005, Ishida showed his paintings across the country, and in 1998, they were included in the first auction of East Asian contemporary art at Christie’s—alongside the work of a young Takashi Murakami—contributing to a surge in interest in his practice.

A portrait of Tetsuya Ishida
Photo: © Tetsuya Ishida, courtesy Tetsuya Ishida Estate

#TetsuyaIshida

Nostalgia and Apocalypse

Nostalgia and Apocalypse

In conjunction with My Anxious Self, the most comprehensive survey of paintings by the late Tetsuya Ishida (1973–2005) to have been staged outside of Japan and the first-ever exhibition of his work in New York, Gagosian hosted a panel discussion. Here, Alexandra Munroe, senior curator at large, Global Arts, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Foundation, and Tomiko Yoda, Takashima Professor of Japanese Humanities at Harvard University, delve into the societal context in which Ishida developed his work, in a conversation moderated by exhibition curator Cecilia Alemani.

Tetsuya Ishida: My Weak Self, My Pitiful Self, My Anxious Self

Tetsuya Ishida: My Weak Self, My Pitiful Self, My Anxious Self

The largest exhibition of the Japanese artist Tetsuya Ishida’s work ever mounted in the United States will open at Gagosian, New York, in September 2023. Curated by Cecilia Alemani, the show tracks the full scope of Ishida’s career. In this excerpt from Alemani’s essay in the exhibition catalogue, she contextualizes Ishida’s paintings against the background of a fraught era in Japan’s history and investigates the work’s enduring relevance in our own time.

Tetsuya Ishida’s Nihilist Realism

Tetsuya Ishida’s Nihilist Realism

Mika Yoshitake details the economic, psychological, and cultural conditions that gave rise to Tetsuya Ishida’s unique strain of Japanese postwar realism.

Tetsuya Ishida: Painter of Modern Life

Tetsuya Ishida: Painter of Modern Life

Yūko Hasegawa explores the fantastical convergences and amalgamations in Tetsuya Ishida’s paintings, their connections to manga and advertising imagery, and the shift that occurred in the artist’s work as he moved from acrylic to oil paint in 2000.

Tetsuya Ishida’s Testimony

Tetsuya Ishida’s Testimony

Edward M. Gómez writes on the Japanese artist’s singular aesthetic, describing him as an astute observer of the culture of his time.

Cover of the book Tetsuya Ishida: My Anxious Self

Tetsuya Ishida: My Anxious Self

$100
Haunted Realism Tetsuya Ishida Poster

Haunted Realism (Tetsuya Ishida)

$10
Cover of the book Haunted Realism

Haunted Realism

$120
Cover of the Gagosian Quarterly: Fall 2023 Issue featuring artwork by Derrick Adams

Gagosian Quarterly: Fall 2023 Issue

$20
Cover of the Spring 2022 issue of Gagosian Quarterly magazine, featuring artwork by Maurizio Cattelan

Gagosian Quarterly: Spring 2022 Issue

$20

Request more information about
Tetsuya Ishida