Opening
reception on Friday, August 23, 2013, 3-6pm.
Artist will be in attendance.
We are pleased to present returning photographer Yuichi
Takasaka's second exhibition, Fires In the
North, at Art Beatus (Vancouver). Stunning and
ethereal, Takasaka's photographs of the Aurora
Borealis capture the sublime beauty of these
mysterious visitors of the north.
Although the northern lights has been studied and can
now be explained in scientific terms - produced by
photons released from charged nitrogen and oxygen
atoms originating from solar wind that have been
directed toward Earth's poles via Earth's magnetic
field - one cannot escape the feeling of awe that is
inspired by this phenomenon. According to Takasaka,
"My love of colours in nature led me to my love affair
with the Aurora Borealis...These lights became a part
of my life."
Sublime is the name given to what is absolutely
great...what is beyond all comparison great.
In the visual arts, the idea of the sublime has
traditionally been used to describe landscape or
seascape paintings such as those by Casper David
Friedrich or J.M.W. Turner. Although Takasaka's
photographs take place in the northern Canadian
landscape, the predominant sublime element here is not
the vast and remote arctic landscape but it is the
vibrant, elusive and ghostly Aurora Borealis that
invokes feelings of awe, greatness and boundlessness in
these images.
Born in 1968 in Japan, Yuichi Takasaka
immigrated to Canada in his teens when his interest in
photography began to develop. He settled in Yellowknife
in the Northwest Territories for seven years before
moving to Lumby, British Columbia where he currently
resides. He still returns every year to Yellowknife to
lead photographic tours where he continues to photograph
his beloved Aurora Borealis. Takasaka has exhibited his
beautiful and technically proficient photographs around
the world and his work has appeared in various
magazines, newspapers, books, textbooks, films, CD-ROMS
and DVDs, and internet websites including NASA and
National Geographic. In 2007, Takasaka was also
the recipient of the Wildlife Photographer of the Year
Award from BBC Wildlife Magazine.
Fires In the North runs from August 23 - October
18, 2013.
For more information, please visit our website at www.artbeatus.com
or call the gallery at 1 (604) 688-2633.
Immanuel Kant, Critique of Judgement (Oxford
University Press, 2007) 78.
Art Beatus, with a location in
Vancouver, Canada and two locations in Hong Kong,
showcases international art with a focus on contemporary
Chinese art. Art Beatus (Vancouver) is located in
the Nelson Square Office Tower at 108 – 808 Nelson Street
in Vancouver, BC.
Art Beatus (Vancouver) Consultancy Ltd. is open Monday
to Friday, 10am-6pm and is closed on weekends and
holidays. Underground and street parking is
available. Free admission.
For more information, please contact Media
Relations, Tamla Mah or Ellinda Siu by email:
info@artbeatus.com or telephone: 604-688-2633.
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