The two largest artworks in Keiko Kitahara’s ‘Stir Gallery’ in OnCyber are named Cavel and Cavel II. They are flanked on each side by single worded art such as Lier, Ant Lion and Training on the left and Mixture, Pollution and August on the right.
Keiko Kitahara
Member of HAKABOCHI. HAKABOCHI is an art production team based in Tokyo. My works are minted at my own contracts.
You may be familiar with the name HAKABOCHI already from the recent artist feature Haru Komoda. They’re both exploring NFTs together and fortunately decided to share their art in a gallery setting to fully experience. Up close you can see the shapes created act like their own leadlight windows, absent of brushstrokes. Each artwork is a pipe painting…where the pipe is the instrument that carves each coloured edge.
Cavel was minted on May 16th 2021 on Foundation and promptly scoooped up by art collector @krybharat.
Cavel II came to life just over a month later on June 20th, this time minted on OpenSea. The layering and smudging of paint layers in the first Cavel have given way to a cleaner palette. The shapenly stick figure presence is now more vivid.
“This work is painted with acrylic paints on canvas. It was created with a pipe without using a brush. After that, I edited it digitally.” says Keiko.
Keiko’s most recent work ‘Pathfinder‘ is available to enjoy on the Async marketplace, minted on 15th November 2021. This feels like a close up study progressing from what we have seen so far….with one difference.
The artwork changes every 60 minutes because that’s what minting on your own smart contract enables. Yep. Every hour a new scene is shown by the Pathfinder according to Keiko (read more on Twitter). Imagine the artwork in a public space…and it’s lunchtime… you begin to recognise the time in your lounge…from the Pathfinder artwork that lives and breathes with you.
“walk, meet, intersect, find, diverge, walk, meet, intersect, find, diverge, walk… Before you know it, a big road will be built and it will become a guidepost.” says Keiko.
As with many artists, it can pay for collectors to explore beyond OpenSea to discover works that are open to offers. While these are artworks have already sold, there is the possibility of making an offer to the current collector.
Keiko’s arrangements of the daubs of color is the talent here. The stick man simply holds each scene together. Without the stick man… we get to see each single cellular paint element on its own. Let’s take three…