Booth | GC12
Venue | Kyoto International Conference Center, Kyoto, Japan
Participating Artists | Jam Wu
Opening Hours|
11.13(Thur.) 12:00-6:00 p.m.
11.14 (Fri.) 11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
11.15 (Sat.) 11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.11.14 (Fri.) 12:00-7:00 p.m.
11.15 (Sat.) 12:00-7:00 p.m.
11.16 (Sun.) 11:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m.
(Please note that the last entrance is 1 hour before closing)
Kyoto—a city where tradition and transformation quietly coexist—once again becomes the stage for artistic collaboration. At Art Collaboration Kyoto 2025 (ACK), Takuro Someya Contemporary Art (TSCA) and TKG+ (Taipei) present their first-ever dual solo exhibition, featuring Jam Wu and Enrico Isamu Oyama.
Both artists, rooted in distinct cultural and material lineages, engage with the body’s relationship to time, memory, and matter. Taiwanese artist Jam Wu employs delicate acts of cutting, stitching, and weaving paper and fabric—ritualistic gestures through which he transforms fragility into resilience. His works often expand into immersive installations where light and shadow intertwine, evoking the layered textures of memory. In Kyoto, a city known for its crafts and quiet discipline, Wu’s process resonates deeply with the city’s heritage of slow creation and spiritual attentiveness—a dialogue between patience and presence.
Meanwhile, Enrico Isamu Oyama, a Japanese-Italian artist based in New York, redefines abstraction through his dynamic “Quick Turn Structure.” Drawing over archival materials and historical imagery, Oyama infuses surfaces with his bodily rhythm, creating new spatial tempos. His work channels the improvisational pulse of urban life while mirroring the meditative rhythm of Kyoto’s timeless architecture—a fusion of movement and stillness, chaos and harmony.
Within the booth, abstraction does not obscure but guides. Through the acts of touching and seeing, the viewer encounters a shifting field where tactility and temporality converge. Wu’s hand-cut gestures and Oyama’s gestural lines coalesce as two modes of time—one slow and tactile, the other rapid and rhythmic—each tracing how memory inhabits material form.
Since its founding in 2021, ACK has championed “collaboration” as its core ethos, pairing Japanese and international galleries to foster artistic exchange across Asia. Continuing this spirit, TKG+—a gallery dedicated to experimental and cross-disciplinary practices—joins TSCA in creating a dialogue that extends beyond geography, celebrating the multiplicity and connectivity of contemporary Asian art.
Set against Kyoto’s historical and spiritual landscape, the collaboration transforms not only an exhibition but an encounter: between gesture and stillness, between cultures, and between the visible and the felt.

