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TIDE (Ide Tatsuhiro)

JapaneseJapanese
, b. 1970

TIDE’s painting and sculpture has one mysterious protagonist at its heart – a cartoon cat. The monochromatic palette used throughout summons a sense of nostalgia, a considered choice by the artist which emboldens his romanced renditions of childhood hopes and dreams. TIDE experiments with depth and scale, often juxtaposing his flat, two-dimensional felines with three-dimensional backgrounds filled with detailed greyscale brushwork. To create the works, he paints with acrylic on canvas and sculpts using vinyl, ceramic and porcelain. Inspired by the modernist French Intimist painters who depicted scenes from everyday family life, TIDE often places his characters in familiar domestic settings. The Pop Art of Roy Lichtenstein has also had a notable impact on his work, along with the Young British Artists and manga by Shigeru Mizuki. TIDE also works within the orbit of Japanese Superflat, a contemporary movement blending ancient artistic traditions with the hyper-consumerist sheen of contemporary urban aesthetics. At the heart of TIDE’s work is a philosophy of dualism, a constant play between light and dark, humour and seriousness, innocence and melancholy. While the environments of his paintings are often secure, private spaces, each piece is imbued with disquiet undertones created through careful aesthetic contradictions. In paintings like Beast (2020) and Do Not Disturb (2020), for example, the adult-like facial expressions are contrasted by the cat’s child-like stature. Through such existential characterisation, TIDE brings complex human emotions to the fore, attesting a yearning for a simpler, youthful time that, for most of us, has already passed. "I don’t think about color. I like to express beautiful silhouettes which become blurred through color, and the impact fades.” – TIDE