The gallery, tucked behind a Shinjuku love hotel turned boutique, was barely 40 tsubo . Yet Sumiko transformed it into a meditation on the year’s unspoken anxieties: the jobless freeter , the aging of the postwar generation, the glitch of analog memory. Curator Ishida Taro described it as “kintsugi for the soul’s hard drive.”
On opening night, Sumiko did something unforgettably strange. She sat in a corner and dialed a rotary phone—disconnected years ago—speaking in a whisper to someone named “Yoshiko.” Later, we learned Yoshiko was her childhood friend, lost in the 1995 Hanshin earthquake. The dial tone, amplified through a cracked speaker, lasted three hours. Half the audience left. The other half wept. Gallery Kiyooka Sumiko 1998
Twenty-five years on, the 1998 show feels prophetic. Before digital archiving, before “curated nostalgia,” Sumiko asked: How do you store grief when the medium itself is a folding? The paper will yellow. The creases will soften. But in that gallery, for those six weeks, memory was not preserved—it was performed . Deliberately fragile. Uncomfortably alive. The gallery, tucked behind a Shinjuku love hotel
To step into Gallery Kiyooka in the autumn of 1998 was to step into a wabi-sabi fever dream—just as the economic bubble’s last colors faded from Tokyo’s corporate lobbies. Sumiko’s show was not a roar but a deliberate, devastating whisper. She sat in a corner and dialed a
Not a comfortable exhibition. Not a beautiful one. But necessary. ★★★★☆ (lost half a star only for the unforgivable lack of benches—my knees still ache.) If you’d like, I can also create a fictional artist biography for Kiyooka Sumiko, or describe the actual works in the “Folding Series” as if for a museum catalog.
The Whisper of Folding Time: Revisiting Kiyooka Sumiko’s 1998 Tokyo Retrospective
Tokyo Art Observer , Issue 44 (Winter 1999 – Rediscovered Draft)