Lot Essay
Japanese painter Makiko Kudo’s sumptuous, wistful works synthesise elements from her memory and daily life with imagined landscapes, creating visions of dreamlike beauty and masterful painterly poise. In Burning Red, the central figure embodies the sense of floating or weightlessness common to many of her compositions. Seemingly unmoored from reality, the work’s surreal composition, diversity of colour and freshness of texture is typical of Kudo’s work. Barry Schwabsky enthuses that ‘in Kudo’s painting there is a lot to know, a lot to wonder at. The multiplicity of variations in the innumerable touches by which she applies her colours is only one aspect of this. Terry R. Myers has rightly spoken of ‘a level of painterly complexity and “touch” not typically seen in Japanese painting of the last decade” in Kudo’s work, but what I want to emphasize is how this complexity of facture represents a twofold sensitivity, both to the surface of the painting as an entity that is not to be thought of as “flat” but on the contrary as dense, richly nuanced, and multivalent, and to the sensations and impulses that play across it. It is in the orchestration of this multiplicity that Kudo’s recent paintings attain a kind of classical grandeur.’