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  • Restrained Emotions Simmer in Shinsuke Inoueโ€™s Tender Wood Sculptures Kate Mothes
    Around a decade ago, Shinsuke Inoue sourced a piece of Japanese wood and carved a depiction of his child, โ€œwanting 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. Inoueโ€™s pieces possess a kind of elemental groundedness or gravity that makes their restrained, sometimes hard-to-read expressions remarkably alluring.
     

Restrained Emotions Simmer in Shinsuke Inoueโ€™s Tender Wood Sculptures

19 March 2026 at 15:28
Restrained Emotions Simmer in Shinsuke Inoueโ€™s Tender Wood Sculptures

Around a decade ago, Shinsuke Inoue sourced a piece of Japanese wood and carved a depiction of his child, โ€œwanting 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.

Inoueโ€™s 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.

A figurative, painted wood sculpture of a seated young woman in three-quarter profile by Shinsuke Inoue

Inoue works intuitively, allowing the materialโ€™s natural qualities to guide his hand. โ€œIย have virtually no idea what the finished piece will look like until I actually begin working with the wood,โ€ he says. โ€œAs 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 heโ€™s close to, along with strangers he passes on the street or sees photographs of, but his sculptures arenโ€™t realistic depictions of specific individuals. Instead, Inoue concentrates on capturing a kind of universal expression of โ€œthe very essence of human existenceโ€ฆ I hope that the inherent appeal of the wood, combined with its form and color, resonates to convey the essence of humanity itself.โ€

See more on Instagram.

A figurative, painted wood sculpture of a young man in three-quarter profile by Shinsuke Inoue
A figurative, painted wood sculpture by Shinsuke Inoue in profile
a collection of carved wooden figures and a large hand
A figurative, painted wood sculpture of a young woman in a green cloak, in three-quarter, profile by Shinsuke Inoue
A figurative, painted wood sculpture of a woman with a ponytail by Shinsuke Inoue in profile
A figurative, painted wood sculpture of a young man in three-quarter profile by Shinsuke Inoue
A detail of a figurative, painted wood sculpture of a young man by Shinsuke Inoue
A figurative, painted wood sculpture of a young man in three-quarter profile by Shinsuke Inoue

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Restrained Emotions Simmer in Shinsuke Inoueโ€™s Tender Wood Sculptures appeared first on Colossal.

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