Kana Tsumura Japan, b. 1998
The beginning of the room, 2024
Chalk ground and oil painting on wooden panel
73 x 60cm
28.7 x 23.6 in
Framed:
83.5 x 71 cm
32.7x 27.9 in
28.7 x 23.6 in
Framed:
83.5 x 71 cm
32.7x 27.9 in
Copyright The Artist
Further images
In The Beginning of the Room, Japanese artist Kana Tsumura orchestrates a luminous still life that merges classical technique with subtle psychological tension. This striking work,painted in oil on a...
In The Beginning of the Room, Japanese artist Kana Tsumura orchestrates a luminous still life that merges classical technique with subtle psychological tension. This striking work,painted in oil on a wooden panel, draws the viewer into a constructed world where lushnatural forms and precisely placed objects speak in a quiet, symbolic language.
At the heart of the composition, a profusion of crimson and coral tulips spills dramaticallyfrom a white ceramic vase. Their fluttering, full-bodied petals verge on overripe, capturing afleeting moment between bloom and collapse. Around them, elements of a silent banquetemerge: a cluster of dusky grapes, a sleek silver fish laid out on a platter, a glass of deep redwine, and a polished blue orb that echoes both stillness and enigma.
The setting is steeped in controlled contrast. A saturated cerulean backdrop and starklighting sculpt the space with theatrical precision, transforming ordinary objects into iconsof suspended meaning. The arched niche behind the flowers functions almost like a portal—framing the floral arrangement as though it were a sacred offering or the centerpiece of aforgotten ritual.Tsumura deepens the narrative with her mastery of texture and surface. The velvety softnessof petals, the moist shimmer of the fish, and the cool transparency of glass are rendered withnear-hyperreal attention, inviting the viewer into a tactile experience of time and transience.
The Beginning of the Room contemplates presence and absence, beauty and impermanence. With this work, Tsumura offers a space both intimate and staged—a visual poem wherebeginnings feel tender, deliberate, and filled with quiet potential.
At the heart of the composition, a profusion of crimson and coral tulips spills dramaticallyfrom a white ceramic vase. Their fluttering, full-bodied petals verge on overripe, capturing afleeting moment between bloom and collapse. Around them, elements of a silent banquetemerge: a cluster of dusky grapes, a sleek silver fish laid out on a platter, a glass of deep redwine, and a polished blue orb that echoes both stillness and enigma.
The setting is steeped in controlled contrast. A saturated cerulean backdrop and starklighting sculpt the space with theatrical precision, transforming ordinary objects into iconsof suspended meaning. The arched niche behind the flowers functions almost like a portal—framing the floral arrangement as though it were a sacred offering or the centerpiece of aforgotten ritual.Tsumura deepens the narrative with her mastery of texture and surface. The velvety softnessof petals, the moist shimmer of the fish, and the cool transparency of glass are rendered withnear-hyperreal attention, inviting the viewer into a tactile experience of time and transience.
The Beginning of the Room contemplates presence and absence, beauty and impermanence. With this work, Tsumura offers a space both intimate and staged—a visual poem wherebeginnings feel tender, deliberate, and filled with quiet potential.
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