Restrained Emotions Simmer in Shinsuke Inoueโs Tender Wood Sculptures
Around a decade ago, Shinsuke Inoue sourced a piece of Japanese wood and carved a depiction of his child, โwanting to preserve their likeness in three dimensions,โ the artist tells Colossal. The affectionate expression of a loved one in sculptural form spurred a new passion for woodcarving, specifically with an emphasis on the human figure.
Inoueโs pieces possess a kind of elemental groundedness or gravity that makes their restrained, sometimes hard-to-read expressions remarkably alluring. The figures often look straight ahead, and at the right angle, they make powerful eye contact with the viewer. And not unlike the way a small, meaningful smile or tiny frown can emerge from the most minute twitch of facial muscles, the striking characters are physically diminutive, but their inner emotional worlds are infinite.

Inoue works intuitively, allowing the materialโs natural qualities to guide his hand. โIย have virtually no idea what the finished piece will look like until I actually begin working with the wood,โ he says. โAs a result, the form often emerges as I carve, and I frequently change my plans midway through the process. Naturally, I keep the many failures a secret.โ He always carves using hand tools and rarely titles the pieces.
The artist also references people heโs close to, along with strangers he passes on the street or sees photographs of, but his sculptures arenโt realistic depictions of specific individuals. Instead, Inoue concentrates on capturing a kind of universal expression of โthe very essence of human existenceโฆ I hope that the inherent appeal of the wood, combined with its form and color, resonates to convey the essence of humanity itself.โ
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